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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #55932 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/55932)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The collected works of William Hazlitt,
-Vol. 1 (of 12), by William Hazlitt
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The collected works of William Hazlitt, Vol. 1 (of 12)
-
-Author: William Hazlitt
-
-Editor: A. R. Waller
- Arnold Glover
-
-Other: W. E. Henley
-
-Release Date: November 11, 2017 [EBook #55932]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK COLLECTED WORKS--WILLIAM HAZLITT, VOL 1 ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Richard Tonsing and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- THE
- COLLECTED WORKS OF WILLIAM HAZLITT
- IN TWELVE VOLUMES
-
-
- VOLUME ONE
-
-
-
-
- _All rights reserved_
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _William Hazlitt._
-
- _Aged 13.
- from a Miniature on Ivory
- Painted by his Brother._
-]
-
-
-
-
- THE COLLECTED WORKS OF
- WILLIAM HAZLITT
-
- EDITED BY A. R. WALLER AND ARNOLD GLOVER
-
- WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY
- W. E. HENLEY
-
- ❦
-
- The Round Table
-
- Characters of Shakespear’s Plays
-
- A Letter to William Gifford, Esq.
-
- ❦
-
- 1902
- LONDON: J. M. DENT & CO.
- McCLURE, PHILLIPS & CO.: NEW YORK
-
-
-
-
- Edinburgh: T. and A. CONSTABLE, (late) Printers to Her Majesty
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
-
- INTRODUCTION BY WILLIAM ERNEST HENLEY vii
-
- EDITORS’ PREFACE xxvii
-
- THE ROUND TABLE xxix
-
- CHARACTERS OF SHAKESPEAR’S PLAYS, 165
-
- A LETTER TO WILLIAM GIFFORD, ESQ., 363
-
- NOTES 415
-
-
-
-
- INTRODUCTION
-
-
-Hazlitt’s father, a minister in the Unitarian Church, was the son of an
-Antrim dissenter, who had removed to Tipperary; Hazlitt’s mother was the
-daughter of a Cambridgeshire yeoman; so that there is small room for
-wonder if Hazlitt were all his life distinguished by a fine
-pugnaciousness of mind, a fiery courage, an excellent doggedness of
-temper, and (not to crack the wind of the poor metaphor) a brilliancy in
-the use of his hands unequalled in his time, and since his time, by any
-writing Englishman. Of course, he was very much else; or this monument
-to his genius would scarce be building, this draft to his credit would
-have been drawn for To-Morrow on To-Day. But, while he lived, his
-fighting talent was the sole thing in his various and splendid gift that
-was evident to the powers that were; and, inasmuch as he loved nothing
-so dearly as asserting himself to the disadvantage of certain
-superstitions which the said powers esteemed the very stuff of life,
-they did their utmost to dissemble his uncommon merits, and to present
-him to the world at large as a person whose morals were deplorable,
-whose nose was pimpled, whose mind was lewd, whose character would no
-more bear inspection than his English, whose heart and soul and taste
-were irremediable, and who, as he persisted in regarding ‘the Corsican
-fiend’ as a culmination of human genius and character, must for that
-reason especially—(but there were many others)—be execrated as a public
-enemy, and stuck in the pillory whenever, in the black malice of his
-corrupt and poisonous heart, he sought, by feigning an affection for
-Shakespeare, or an interest in metaphysics, to recommend his vulgar,
-mean, pernicious personality to the attention of a loyal, God-fearing,
-church-going, tax-paying, Pope-and-Pretender-hating British Public. I
-cannot say that I regret the very scandalous attacks that were made on
-Hazlitt: since, if they had not been, we should have lacked some
-admirable pages in the _Political Essays_ and _The Spirit of the Age_,
-nor should we now be privileged to rejoice in the dignified and splendid
-savagery of the _Letter to William Gifford_. And, if I do not regret
-them for myself and the many who think with me, still less can I wish
-them wanting for Hazlitt’s sake; for if they had been, who shall say how
-dull and how profitless, how weary and flat and stale, some years of
-what he described, in his last words to his kind, as ‘a happy life’—how
-mean and beggarly may not some days in these years have seemed? But
-there is, after all, a reason for being rather sorry than not that
-Hazlitt’s polemic was so brilliant, his young conviction so unalterably
-constant, his example so detestable as it seemed to the magnificent
-ruffian in _Blackwood_ and the infinitely spiteful underling in _The
-Quarterly_. The British Public of those days was a good, hard-hitting,
-hard-drinking, hard-living lot; and, in the matter of letters, there was
-no guile in it. It read its Campbell, its Rogers, its Moore, its Hook
-and Egan and Jon Bee; it accepted its convinced and pedantic sycophant
-in Southey, its gay, light-hearted protestant in Leigh Hunt; it nibbled
-at its Wordsworth, knew not what to make of its Coleridge, swallowed its
-Cobbett (that prince of pugilists) as its morning rasher and toast; it
-made much of Hone, yet was far from contemptuous of Westmacott; it laid
-itself open to its Scott and its Byron, Michael and Satan, the Angel of
-Acceptance and the Angel of Revolt. Withal it was essentially a Tory
-Public: a public long practised in fearing God and honouring the King;
-with half an ear for Major Cartwright and his like, and a whole mind for
-the story of Randal and Cribb; honestly and jovially proud of Nelson and
-‘The Duke,’ but neither loving the Emperor nor seeking to understand
-him. Now, to Hazlitt the Revolution was humanity _in excelsis_, while
-the Emperor, being democracy incarnate, and so a complete expression of
-character and human genius, was as his god. Gifford, then, and Wilson,
-had small difficulty in blasting Hazlitt’s fame, and in so far ruining
-Hazlitt’s chance that ’tis but now, after some seventy years, that he
-takes his place in literary history as the hero of a Complete Edition.
-In the meanwhile he has had praise, and praise again. But it has come
-ever from the few, and he has yet to be considered of the general as a
-critic of many elements in human activity, a master of his
-mother-tongue, and one, and that one not the least, in an epoch
-illustrious in the achievement of Keats and Shelley and Wordsworth, the
-inimitable Cobbett, Byron and Sir Walter, Coleridge, the Arch-Potency
-(who, ‘prone on the flood’ of failure, ever ‘lies floating many a
-rood’), and the thrice-beloved Lamb.
-
-
- I
-
-The elder Hazlitt was trained in Glasgow. A man of spirit and
-understanding, an active and a vigilant minister, he married Grace
-Loftus, the Wisbech yeoman’s daughter, in 1766; and in 1778 (he being
-much older than she), the last of their children, their son William, was
-born to them at Maidstone. Five years later this son accompanied his
-parents to Philadelphia. There the elder Hazlitt preached and lectured
-for some fifteen months; but in 1786–87, having meanwhile established
-the earliest Unitarian church in America, he returned to England, and
-settled at Wem, in Shropshire, which was practically Hazlitt’s first
-taste of native earth. A precocious youngster, well grounded by his
-father, himself a man of parts and reading,[1] he was responsible as
-early as 1792 for a _New Theory of Criminal and Civil Jurisprudence_,
-and at fifteen he went to the Unitarian College at Hackney, there to
-study for the ministry. But his mind changed. In the meantime he learned
-something of literature, something of metaphysics, something of
-painting, something (I doubt not) of life; the Revolution blazed out,
-Bonaparte fell falconwise upon Austrian Italy, and approved himself the
-greatest captain since Marlborough; there was a strong unrest in time
-and the destiny of man; the ambitions of life were changed, the
-possibilities and conditions of life transformed. The skies thrilled
-with the dawn of a new day, and Hazlitt: already, it is fair to
-conjecture, at grips with that potent and implacable devil of sex which
-possessed him so vigorously for so many years; already, too, the devout
-and militant Radical, the fanatic of Bonaparte, he remained till the
-end: was no longer for the pulpit. And at this moment existence was
-transfigured for him also. In the January of 1798, Coleridge, that
-embodied Inspiration, visited the elder Hazlitt at Wem, and preached his
-last (Unitarian) sermon in the chapel there. He was at his best, his
-freshest, his most copious, his most expressive and persuasive; he had
-the poet’s eye, the poet’s mouth, the poet’s voice, impulse, authority,
-style; he had already ‘fed on honey-dew, and drunk the milk of
-Paradise’; and he carried Hazlitt clean off his legs. To the sombre,
-personal, scarce lettered but very thoughtful youth this voluble and
-affecting Apparition was the bearer of a revelation. He listened to
-Coleridge as to a John Baptist. He dared to talk metaphysics, and was so
-far rewarded for his valour as to be encouraged to persevere.[2] What
-was of vastly greater importance, he was asked to Stowey in the spring
-of the same year: an event from which he dated the true beginnings of
-his intellectual life.
-
-In that centre of enchantment he stayed three weeks. It was a Golden
-Year. Hazlitt was drunk throughout with what I should like to call
-Neophytism. Coleridge was magnificent—elusive, archimagian,
-irresistible; Wordsworth was opinionated but sublime; at intervals, as
-in Sir Richard Burton’s _Thousand Nights and a Night_, they ‘repeated
-the following verses.’ It was a time—O, but it was a time! A time of
-ecstasy: ‘When proud-pied April was in all his trim,’ and even ‘heavy
-Saturn’ must have laughed, if only to keep his yoke-fellow, Wordsworth,
-in company; Wordsworth with his thick airs, and his luminous Belt, and
-his dull but steady-going group of Moons! A time of gold, I say; yet had
-it a most strange outcome. In 1798 Coleridge and Wordsworth were
-Revolutionaries in everything: they looked to France for liberty, for
-change, for a shining and enduring example. Hazlitt was with them now
-and here: his also was a revolutionary soul, he also was of a mind with
-Danton, he also looked to France for leading and light, he also held the
-assault delivered upon France for an assault against Freedom. But
-Coleridge and Wordsworth changed their minds, and readjusted their
-points of view; and he did not. They loved not Bonaparte; and he did.
-And the end of it was that, so far as I know, he never wrote with so
-ripe and sensual a gust: not even, to my mind, when he was merely
-annihilating Gifford: as when, long years after Nether-Stowey, he broke
-in upon the strong, solid hold of Wordsworth’s egotism, and tore to
-tatters—tatters which he flung upon the wind—the old, greasy prophet’s
-mantle,[3] which Coleridge had sported to so little purpose for so many
-years. To Hazlitt, the dissenter born, the deeply brooding, the
-inflexible—to Hazlitt, I say, these Twin-Stars of the Romantic Movement
-were common turn-coats; and he dealt with them on occasion as he thought
-fit. But he never lost his interest in them; and when it comes to a
-comparison between Wordsworth, the renegade, and Byron, the leader of
-storming-parties, the captain of forlorn-hopes, then is his idiosyncrasy
-revealed. He hacks and stabs, he jibes and sneers and denies, till there
-is no Byron left, and the sole poet of the century is the ‘gentlemanly
-creature—reads nothing but his own poetry, I believe,’—whose best
-passages, in a moment of supreme geniality, he once likened, not to
-their advantage, to those of ‘the classic Akenside.’
-
-
- II
-
-It was from Nether-Stowey that Hazlitt dated his regard for poetry. But
-if literature came late to him, as (his father’s office and his own
-metaphysical inklings aiding) it did, he ever cherished a pure and
-ardent passion for it, once it had come. Yet he was by no means widely
-read, and in his last years seldom finished a new book. First and last,
-indeed, he was a man of few books and fewer authors. Shakespeare, Burke,
-Cervantes, Rabelais, Milton, the _Decameron_, the _Nouvelle Héloïse_ and
-the _Confessions_, Richardson’s epics of the parlour and Fielding’s
-epics of the road—these things and their kind he read intensely; and,
-when it pleased him to speak of them, it was ever in the terms of
-understanding and regard. Yet it was long ere he had any thought of
-writing; and it was necessity alone that made him a man of letters. In
-the beginning, the Pulpit proving impossible, he turned to painting for
-a career, and, after certain studies, presumably under his elder brother
-John,[4] and possibly under Northcote, he went to the Paris of the First
-Consul, and painted there for some four months in a Louvre which the
-thrift of Bonaparte had stored with the choicest plunder in Italian Art.
-I know not whether or no he could ever have been a painter. Haydon, who
-neither loved nor understood him, and was, besides, a man who could
-greatly dare and ‘toil terribly’—Haydon says that he was at once too
-lazy and too timid ever to succeed in painting: an art in which, as
-Haydon showed, and as Millet was presently to say, ‘You must flay
-yourself alive, and give your skin.’[5] I do not think that Hazlitt was
-daunted by what may be called the painfulness of painting; for in
-letters he was soon enough to prove that he had in him to face a world
-in arms, and to tincture his writings, if need were, with the best blood
-of his heart. In any case, after divers essays at copying in the
-Louvre,[6] and certain attempts at portraiture on his return to
-England,[7] he found that he could not excel; that, in fact, he was
-neither Titian nor Rembrandt, nor could he even be Sir Joshua. So he
-painted no more, but went on _reading_ certain painters: very much, I
-assume, as he went on taking certain authors; because he loved them for
-themselves, and found emotions—and not only emotions, but
-sensations[8]—in them.
-
-His ideals are Claude, Rembrandt, Raphael, Poussin, Titian; he gives you
-very gentlemanly and intelligent estimates of Watteau and Velasquez; he
-has an eye—a right one—for Rubens and Van Dyck; he exults in Jan Steen,
-has words of worth for Ruysdael and Hobbima, and gives Turner as neat a
-_croc-en-jambe_ as you could wish to see. But, despite his training and
-his gift, he is no more in advance of his age than the best of us here
-and now. To him the Carraccis and Salvator are _sommités_ of a kind; if,
-so far as I remember, he will have nought to do with Carlo Dolci, he
-will not do without his Guido; I have read no word of his on Lawrence,
-no word of his on Constable, none on Morland; on Hogarth he is chiefly
-literary, on Turner not much more than diabolically ingenious. Wisely or
-not, he took pictures as he took books: they might be few, but they must
-be good; and, not only good but, of (as he believed) the best. If they
-were not, or if they were new, he drew them not to his heart, nor
-adorned the chambers of his mind with them. Those chambers were filled
-with good things long since done. To him, then, what were the best
-things doing? It was his habit to take the good thing on; savour its
-excellences to their last sucket; meditate it strictly, jealously,
-privily, longingly; say, if it must be so, a few last words about
-it—some for the painter, more for the man of letters;[9] and then...?
-Well, then he accepted the situation. I do not know that he cared much
-for Keats; I do know that he found Shelley impossible, that he was never
-an exalted Wordsworthian, and that he hesitated—(ever so little, but he
-hesitated!)—even at Charles Lamb. Politics and all, in truth, he was a
-prophet who adored the past, and had but an infidel eye for the promise
-of the years. He was interested only in the highest achievement; and to
-be the highest even that must lie behind him. Thus, Fielding was good,
-and Rubens; Sir Joshua was good, and so were Richardson and Smollett;
-so, likewise, Shakespeare was good, and Raphael and Titian were
-good—these with Milton and Rembrandt, and Burke and Rousseau and
-Boccaccio; and it was well. Well with them, and well—especially
-well!—with him: they had achieved, and here was he, the perfect lover,
-to whom their achievement was as an enchanted garden, a Prospero’s
-Island abounding in romantic and inspiring chances, unending marvels,
-miracles of vision and solace and pure, perennial delight. And if these,
-the ‘Thrones, Dominations, Powers,’ had done their work, and were
-venerable in it, so also in their degrees and sorts had Congreve and
-Watteau, Sir Thomas Browne and Sir Anthony Van Dyck, Wycherley and
-Jordaens; so had even Salvator and John Buncle. In dealing with
-painters, and with purely painters’ pictures, Hazlitt generally strikes
-a right note.[10] But the man of letters in him is inevitably first; and
-’tis not insignificant that some of the ‘crack passages’ in his writings
-about pictures are rhapsodies about places—Burleigh or Oxford—or pieces
-of pure literature like that very human and ingenious essay ‘On the
-Pleasures of Painting,’ which is one of the best good things in _Table
-Talk_.
-
-
- III
-
-So Hazlitt the painter was gathered to his fathers, and in his stead a
-Hazlitt reigned about whom the world knows little worth the telling: a
-Hazlitt who abridged philosophers, and made grammars, and compiled
-anthologies; a married and domesticated Hazlitt; a Hazlitt with a son
-and heir, and a wife who seems to have cared as little for his works and
-him as, in the long run, he assuredly cared for her company and her. The
-lady’s name was Stoddart; she was a brisk, inconsequent, unsexual sort
-of person—a friend of Mary Lamb; and, like the only Mrs. Pecksniff, ‘she
-had a small property.’ It was situate at Winterslow, certain miles from
-Salisbury, and Hazlitt, who loved the neighbourhood, and clung to it
-till the end, has so far illustrated the name that, if there could ever
-be a Hazlitt Cult, the place would instantly become a shrine. It was a
-cottage, within easy walking distance of Wilton and Stonehenge; and in
-1812 the Hazlitts, who were made one in 1808, departed it—it and the
-well-beloved woods of Norman Court—for 19 York Street, Westminster.[11]
-Hence it was that he issued to deliver his first course of lectures;[12]
-and here it was that he entertained those friends he had, made himself a
-reputation by writing in papers and magazines, drank hard, and cured
-himself of drinking, and long ere the end came found his wife
-insufferable. In the beginning he worked in the Reporters’ Gallery,
-where he made notes (in long hand) for _The Morning Chronicle_, and
-learned to take more liquor than was good for him.[13] In this same
-journal he printed some of his best political work, and broke ground as
-a critic of acting; and he left it only because he could not help
-quarrelling with its proprietors.
-
-Another stand-by of his was _The Champion_, to his work in which he owed
-a not unprofitable connexion with _The Edinburgh_; yet another, _The
-Examiner_, to which, with much dramatic criticism, he contributed, at
-Leigh Hunt’s suggestion, the set of essays reprinted as _The Round
-Table_, and in which he may therefore be said to have discovered his
-avocation, and given the measure of his best quality. Then, in 1817, he
-published his _Characters of Shakespeare_, which he dedicated to Charles
-Lamb; in 1818 he reprinted a series of lectures (at the Surrey
-Institute) on the English poets;[14] in 1819–20 he delivered from the
-same platform two courses more—on the Comic Writers and the Age of
-Elizabeth. He wrote for _The Liberal_, _The Yellow Dwarf_, _The London
-Magazine_—(to which he may very well have introduced the unknown
-Elia)—_Colburn’s New Monthly_; he returned to the _Chronicle_ in 1824;
-in 1825 he published _The Spirit of the Age_, in 1826 _The Plain
-Speaker_, the _Boswell Redivivus_ in 1827; and in this last year he set
-to work, at Winterslow, on a life of Napoleon. That was the beginning of
-the end. He had no turn for history, nor none for research; his methods
-were personal, his results singular and brief; he was as it were an
-accidental writer, whose true material was in himself. His health broke,
-and worsened; his publishers went bankrupt; he lost the best part of the
-£500 which he had hoped to earn by his work; and though, consulting none
-but anti-English authorities, he lived to complete a book containing
-much strong thinking and not a few striking passages, it was a thing
-foredoomed to failure: a matter in which the nation, still hating its
-tremendous enemy, and still rejoicing in the man and the battle which
-had brought him to the ground, would not, and could not take an
-interest. Two volumes were published in 1828 (Sir Walter’s _Napoleon_
-appeared in 1827), and two more in 1830; but the work of writing them
-killed the writer.[15] His digestion, always feeble, was ruined; and in
-the September of 1830 he died. He was largely, I should say, a sacrifice
-to tea, which he drank, in vast quantities, of extraordinary strength.
-However this be, his ending was (as he’d have loved to put it) ‘as a
-Chrissom child’s.’[16]
-
-
- IV
-
-Thus much, thus all-too little, of his course in print. For his life,
-despite his many ‘bursts of confidence,’ the admissions of his grandson,
-and the discoveries of such friends as Patmore, the half of it, I think,
-has to be told to us. This was not his fault, for he was in no sense
-secretive: he would no more lie about himself than he would lie about
-Southey or Gifford. His trick of drinking was, while it lasted, public;
-he proclaimed with all his lungs his frank and full approval of the
-fundamentals of the Revolution and his preference of Bonaparte before
-all the Kings in Europe; he despised Shelley the politician, and
-rejected Shelley the poet, and he cherished and made the most he could
-of his resentment against Coleridge and Wordsworth, though his disdain
-for concealment perilled his friendship with Lamb, and well nigh cost
-him the far more facile regard of Leigh Hunt; while, as for Byron, he so
-bitterly resented the ‘noble Lord’s’ pre-eminency that he made no
-difference, strongly as he contemned the Laureate, between the
-Laureate’s _Vision of Judgment_, a piece of English verse immortal by
-the sheer force of its absurdity, and that other _Vision of Judgment_,
-which is one of the great things in English poetry. ’Twas much the same
-in life. Poor Mrs. Hazlitt, though she was well-read, of no account as
-an housekeeper, ‘fond of incongruous finery,’ and capable of
-child-bearing withal, was, one may take for granted, not distinguished
-as a woman. Now, her husband, thinker as he approved himself, was very
-much of a male. Who runs may read of his early loves—Miss Railton and
-the rest; ’tis history—at any rate ’tis history according to
-Wordsworth[17]—that once, in Lakeland, he so dealt with the local beauty
-that he came very near to tasting of the local pond; when Patmore walked
-home with him to Westminster, after his first lecture in the Surrey
-Institute, the wayside nymphs flocked to his encounter, and—(so Patmore
-says)—he knew them all;[18] he has himself recorded the confession that
-in the matter of mob-caps and black stockings and red elbows—in fact, on
-the score of your maid-servant—he could flourish a list as long, or
-thereabouts, as Leporello’s. I know not whether he lied or spoke the
-truth;[19] but I can scarce believe that he lied. I should rather opine
-that on this point, as on others, Hazlitt, a gross and extravagant
-admirer (be it remembered) of J.-J. Rousseau, was, and is, entirely
-credible. We may take it that his veracity is beyond reproach. But ’tis
-another matter with his taste; and for that I can say no more than that
-I have listened to so many confidences:
-
- From some we loved, the loveliest and the best
- That from his Vintage rolling Time has pressed:
-
-that I hold it for merely unessential.
-
-But the man who habitually hugs his housemaid is, whether he boast of it
-or not, no more superior to consequences than another: especially if he
-have, as Hazlitt had, an ardent imagination and a teeming waste of
-sentiment. And so Hazlitt found. About 1819 he ceased from consorting
-with his wife; and in 1820 he lodged with a tailor, one Walker, in
-Southampton Buildings, Chancery Lane. Walker, a most respectable man,
-had daughters, and one of these, a girl well broken-in, it would seem,
-to the ways of ‘gentlemen’—a girl with a dull eye, a ‘sinuous gait,’ and
-a habit of sitting on the knees of ‘gentlemen’; a girl, in fine, who is
-only to be described by an old and sane and homely but unquotable
-designation—this poor half-harlot took on our Don Juan of the area, and
-brought him to utter grief. He looked at passion, as embodied in Sarah
-Walker, until it grew to be the world to him; he went about like a man
-drunken and dazed, telling the story of his slighted love to anybody
-that would listen to it;[20] now he raved and was rampant, now was he
-soul-stricken and heart-broken; he swore he’d marry Walker whether she
-would or not, and to this end he persuaded his wife to follow him to
-Edinburgh, and there divorce him—_pour cause_, as the lady and her legal
-adviser had every reason to believe;[21] and having achieved a divorce,
-which was no divorce in law, and been finally refused by the young woman
-in Southampton Buildings, he set to work assiduously to coin his madness
-into drachmas, and wrote, always with Jean-Jacques Rousseau in his eye,
-that _Liber Amoris_ which the unknowing reader will find in our Second
-Volume. It is a book by no means bad—if you can at all away with it.
-Indeed, it is unique in English, and the hundred guineas Hazlitt got for
-it were uncommonly well earned. But to away with it at all—that is the
-difficulty; and, as it varies with the temperaments of them that read
-the book, I shall discourse no more of it, but content myself with
-noting that, in writing the _Liber Amoris_, Hazlitt wrote off Sarah
-Walker.[22] He had been in love with a housemaid, but he had been very
-much more in love with his love; and, having wearied all he knew with
-descriptions of his feelings, he wrote those feelings down, cleared his
-system, and became himself again. ’Twas Goethe’s way, I believe—his and
-many another’s; the world will scarce get disaccustomed to it while
-there are women and writing men. What distinguishes Hazlitt from a whole
-wilderness of self-chroniclers is the fulness of his revelation. It is
-extraordinary; but, even so, Rousseau had shown him the way. And perhaps
-the simple truth about the _Liber_ is that it is the best Rousseau—the
-best and the nearest to the _Confessions_—done since Rousseau died.
-
-Sarah Hazlitt married no more; but her husband did. In 1824 he took to
-wife a certain Mrs. Bridgewater. She was Scots by birth, had lived much
-abroad, had married and buried a Colonel Bridgewater, was of excellent
-repute, and had about £300 a year; and with her new husband and his son
-by Sarah Stoddart—(who had an idea that his mother had been wronged, and
-seems to have been a most uncomfortable travelling companion)—she toured
-it awhile in France and Italy. On the return journey the Hazlitts left
-her in Paris; and when the elder, writing from London, asked her when
-she purposed to come home to him, she replied that she did not purpose
-to come home to him: that, in fact, she had done with him, and he would
-see her no more. So far as I know, he never did; so that, as his
-grandson says, this second marriage was but ‘an episode.’ Apparently it
-was the last in his life; for neither Mrs. Hazlitt attended him in his
-mortal illness, nor was there any woman at his bed’s head when he
-passed.
-
-
- V
-
-It is told of him that he was dark-eyed and dark-haired, slim in figure,
-rather slovenly in his habit; that he valued himself on his effect in
-evening dress; that his manners were rather ceremonious than easy; that
-he had a wonderfully eloquent face, with a mouth as expressive as
-Kean’s, and a frown like the Giaour’s own[23]—that Giaour whom he did
-not love. He worshipped women, but was awkward and afraid with them; he
-played a good game of fives, and would walk his forty to fifty miles a
-day; he would lie a-bed till two in the afternoon, then rise, dally with
-his breakfast until eight without ever moving from his tea-pot and his
-chair, and go to a theatre, a bite at the Southampton, and talk till two
-in the morning.[24] That he excelled in talk is beyond all doubt.
-Witness after witness is here to his wit, his insight, his grip on
-essentials, his beautiful trick of paradox, his brilliancy in attack,
-his desperate defence, his varying, far-glancing, inextinguishable
-capacity for expression. And he was himself—Hazlitt: a man who borrowed
-nobody’s methods, set no limits to the field of discussion, nor made
-other men wonder if this were no talk but a lecture. He bore no likeness
-to that ‘great but useless genius,’ Coleridge: who, beginning well as
-few begin, lived ever after ‘on the sound of his own voice’; none to
-Wordsworth, whose most inspiring theme was his own poetry; none to
-Sheridan, who ‘never oped his mouth but out there flew’ a jest; none to
-Lamb, who——But no; I cannot imagine Lamb in talk. Hazlitt himself has
-plucked out only a tag or two of Lamb’s mystery; and I own that, even in
-the presence of the notes in which he sets down Lamb as Lamb was to his
-intimates, I am divided in appreciation between the pair. Lamb for the
-unexpected, the incongruous, the profound, the jest that bred
-seriousness, the pun that was that and a light upon dark places, a touch
-of the dread, the all-disclosing Selene, besides; Hazlitt for none of
-these but for himself; and what that was I have tried to show. Well;
-Lamb, Coleridge, Sheridan, Hazlitt, Hunt, Wordsworth—all are dead, tall
-men of their tongues as they were. And dead is Burke, and Fox is dead,
-and Byron, most quizzical of lords! And of them all there is nothing
-left but their published work; and of those that have told us most about
-some of them, ‘in their habit as they lived,’ the best and the
-strictest-seeing, the most eloquent and the most persuasive, is
-assuredly Hazlitt. And, being something of an expert in talk,[25] I
-think that, if I could break the grave and call the great ghosts back to
-earth for a spell of their mortal fury, I would begin and end with Lamb
-and Hazlitt: Lamb as he always was;[26] Hazlitt in one of his high and
-mighty moods, sweeping life, and letters, and the art of painting, and
-the nature of man, and the curious case of woman (especially the curious
-case of woman!) into a rapture of give-and-take, a night-long series of
-achievements in consummate speech.
-
-
- VI
-
-Many men, as Coleridge, have written well, and yet talked better than
-they wrote. I have named Coleridge, though his talk, prodigious as it
-was, in the long run ended in ‘Om-m-mject’ and ‘Sum-m-mject,’ and
-though, some enchanting and undying verses apart, his writing, save when
-it is merely critical, is nowadays of small account. But, in truth, I
-have in my mind, rather, two friends, both dead, of whom one, an artist
-in letters, lived to conquer the English-speaking world, while the
-second, who should, I think, have been the greater writer, addicted
-himself to another art, took to letters late in life, and, having the
-largest and the most liberal utterance I have known, was constrained by
-the very process of composition so to produce himself that scarce a
-touch of his delightful, apprehensive, all-expressing spirit appeared
-upon his page. I take these two cases because both are excessive. In the
-one you had both speech and writing; in the other you found a rarer
-brain, a more fanciful and daring humour, a richer gusto, perhaps a
-wider knowledge, in any event a wider charity. And at one point the two
-met, and that point was talk. Therein each was pre-eminent, each
-irresistible, each a master after his kind, each endowed with a full
-measure of those gifts that qualify the talker’s temperament: as voice
-and eye and laugh, look and gesture, humour and fantasy, audacity and
-agility of mind, a lively and most impudent invention, a copious
-vocabulary, a right gift of foolery, a just, inevitable sense of
-conversational right and wrong. Well; one wrote like an angel, the other
-like poor Poll; and both so far excelled in talk that I can take it on
-me to say that they who know them only in print scarce know them at all.
-’Twas thus, I imagine, with Hazlitt. He wrote the best he could; but I
-see many reasons to believe that he was very much more brilliant and
-convincing at the Southampton than he is in the most convincing and the
-most brilliant of his Essays. He was a full man; he had all the talker’s
-gifts; he exulted in all kinds of oral opportunities; what more is there
-to say? Sure ’tis the case of all that are born to talk as well as
-write. They live their best in talk, and what they write is but a sop
-for posterity: a last dying speech and confession (as it were) to show
-that not for nothing were they held rare fellows in their day.
-
-This is not to say that Hazlitt was not an admirable man of letters. His
-theories were many, for he was a reality among men, and so had many
-interests, and there was none on which he did not write forcibly,
-luminously, arrestingly. He had the true sense of his material, and used
-the English language as a painter his pigments, as a musician the
-varying and abounding tonalities that constitute a symphonic scheme. His
-were a beautiful and choice vocabulary, an excellent ear for cadence, a
-notable gift of expression. In fact, when Stevenson was pleased to
-declare that ‘we are mighty fine fellows, but we cannot write like
-William Hazlitt,’ he said no more than the truth. Whether or not we are
-mighty fine fellows is a Great Perhaps; but that none of us, from
-Stevenson down, can as writers come near to Hazlitt—this, to me, is
-merely indubitable. To note that he now and then writes blank verse is
-to note that he sometimes writes impassioned prose;[27] he misquoted
-habitually; he was a good hater, and could be monstrous unfair; he was
-given to thinking twice, and his second thoughts were not always better
-than his first; he repeated himself as seemed good to him. But in the
-criticism of politics, the criticism of letters, the criticism of
-acting, the criticism and expression of life,[28] there is none like
-him. His politics are not mine; I think he is ridiculously mistaken when
-he contrasts the Wordsworth of the best things in _The Excursion_ with
-the ‘classic Akenside’; his _Byron_ is the merest petulance; his _Burke_
-(when he is in a bad temper with Burke), his _Fox_, his _Pitt_, his
-_Bonaparte_—these are impossible. Also, I never talk art or life with
-him but I disagree. But I go on reading him, all the same; and I find
-that technically and spiritually I am always the better for the bout.
-Where outside Boswell is there better talk than in Hazlitt’s _Boswell
-Redivivus_—his so-called _Conversations with Northcote_? And his _Age of
-Elizabeth_, and his _Comic Writers_, and his _Spirit of the Age_—where
-else to look for such a feeling for differences, such a sense of
-literature, such an instant, such a masterful, whole-hearted interest in
-the marking and distinguishing qualities of writers? And _The Plain
-Speaker_—is it not at least as good reading as (say) _Virginibus
-Puerisque_ and the discoursings of the late imperishable Mr. Pater! His
-_Political Essays_ is readable after—how many years? His notes on Kean
-and the Siddons are as novel and convincing as when they were penned. In
-truth, he is ever a solace and a refreshment. As a critic of letters he
-lacks the intense, immortalising vision, even as he lacks, in places,
-the illuminating and inevitable style of Lamb. But if he be less
-savoury, he is also more solid, and he gives you phrases, conclusions,
-splendours of insight and expression, high-piled and golden essays in
-appreciation: as the _Wordsworth_ and the _Coleridge_ of the _Political
-Essays_, the character of Hamlet, the note on Shakespeare’s style, the
-_Horne Tooke_, the _Cervantes_, the _Rousseau_, the _Sir Thomas Browne_,
-the _Cobbet_: that must ever be rated high among the possessions of the
-English mind.
-
-As a writer, therefore, it is with Lamb that I would bracket him: they
-are dissimilars, but they go gallantly and naturally together—_par
-nobile fratrum_.[29] Give us these two, with some ripe Cobbett, a volume
-of Southey, some Wordsworth, certain pages of Shelley, a great deal of
-the Byron who wrote letters, and we get the right prose of the time. The
-best of it all, perhaps, is the best of Lamb. But Hazlitt’s, for
-different qualities, is so imminent and shining a second that I hesitate
-as to the pre-eminency. Probably the race is Lamb’s. But Hazlitt is ever
-Hazlitt; and at his highest moments Hazlitt is hard to beat, and has not
-these many years been beaten.
-
- W. E. H.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1:
-
- Hazlitt has glanced at him in his notes on dissenters and dissent in
- the _Political Essays_, and has given a further taste of him in that
- very notable and gracious piece, ‘My First Acquaintance with Poets.’
-
-Footnote 2:
-
- In 1805 he produced his essay on the Principles of Human Action. Being
- no metaphysician, I have never read this work; but Mr. Leslie Stephen,
- who is a very competent person in these matters, I am told, assures me
- (_D. N. B._) that it is ‘scrupulously dry,’ though ‘showing great
- acuteness.’ This, I take leave to say—this is Hazlitt all over. None
- has written of the workaday elements in life and time with a rarer
- taste, a finer relish, a stronger confidence in himself and them. Yet,
- in dealing with absolutes in life and time, he is ‘scrupulously dry.’
- This, I take it, is to be a man of letters.
-
-Footnote 3:
-
- Or rather bedgown: unction-soiled and laudanum-stained.
-
-Footnote 4:
-
- John Hazlitt had been a pupil of Reynolds, and his miniatures were
- welcome at the Academy.
-
-Footnote 5:
-
- Dans l’art il faut donner sa peau.
-
-Footnote 6:
-
- He had a painter in him, whether imperfectly developed or not; for he
- would condescend upon none but Guido, Raphael, Titian.
-
-Footnote 7:
-
- One was a likeness of his father, of which he has written in eloquent
- and engaging terms; another, a _Wordsworth_, which he destroyed; a
- third, the picture of Elia, ‘as a Venetian senator,’ now in the
- National Portrait Gallery; yet another, the presentment of an Old
- Woman, which is likened to a Rembrandt. Having seen none of these
- things, all I can say about them is that Hazlitt seems to have been
- passionately interested in colour; that he loved a picture because it
- was a piece of painting; and, if he knew not always bad (or rather
- third and fourth rate) work when he saw it, was as contemptuous of it,
- when he realised its status, as Fuseli himself.
-
-Footnote 8:
-
- There is an immense, even an insuperable difference between the two
- sorts of sensualists. To take an immediate instance: Lamb loved
- Hogarth, and found emotions in him, because he (Hogarth) was a
- novelist in paint; while Titian’s _Bacchus and Ariadne_ touched his
- sense of letters, and, as Mr. Ainger has noted, suggested to him so
- much literature, or, at all events, so many literary possibilities,
- that Titian could not but be an arch-painter. Hazlitt felt his painter
- first, and thought not of the man-of-letters in his painter till his
- interest in his painter’s painting was—I won’t say extinguished
- but—allayed.
-
-Footnote 9:
-
- ‘The point in debate,’ he says, ‘the worth or the bad quality of the
- painting ... I am as well able to decide upon as any who ever
- brandished a pallette.’ I doubt not that he spoke the truth; yet the
- residuum of his criticisms of pictures, their after-taste, is mostly
- literary. And, as he was finally a man of letters, what else could one
- expect?
-
-Footnote 10:
-
- Leigh Hunt said that he was the best art critic that ever lived: that
- to read him was like seeing a picture through stained glass, and so
- forth. But Leigh Hunt knew not much more about pictures than Coleridge
- knew about the books he talked of, but had not read.
-
-Footnote 11:
-
- The house had been the abode of Milton; for certain months it had
- harboured the eminent James Mill; it belonged to the celebrated Jeremy
- Bentham: so that in the matter of associations Hazlitt, a
- thorough-paced dissenter, was as well off as he could hope to be.
-
-Footnote 12:
-
- Ten in number: on ‘The Rise and Progress of Modern Philosophy,’ as
- illustrated in the works of Hobbes, Locke and his followers, Hartley,
- Helvétius, and others. The lectures, Mr. Stephen says, were in part a
- reproduction of the _Principles of Human Action_.
-
-Footnote 13:
-
- Haydon says that Waterloo made him drunk for weeks. Then he pulled
- himself together, and for the rest of his life drank nothing but
- strong tea. He had, however, no sort of sympathy with those who held
- the ‘social glass’ to be Man’s safest introduction to the Pit. He only
- said that liquor did not agree with him, and looked on cheerfully
- while his friends—Lamb was as close as any—drank as they pleased.
-
-Footnote 14:
-
- Both the _Characters_ and the _English Poets_ were reviewed by Gifford
- in the _Quarterly_. The style of these ‘reviews’ is abject; the
- inspiration venal; the matter the very dirt of the mind. Gifford hated
- Hazlitt for his politics, and set out to wither Hazlitt’s repute as a
- man of letters. For the tremendous reprisal with which he was visited,
- the reader is referred to the _Letter to William Gifford, Esq._, in
- the first volume of the present Edition. If he find it over-savage:
- probably, being of to-day, he will: let him turn to his _Quarterly_,
- and consider, if he have the stomach, Gifford and the matter of
- offence.
-
-Footnote 15:
-
- He lived to rejoice in the Revolution of July; but of the great
- movement in the arts—of _Henri Trois et sa Cour_ and _Hernani_, of
- Delacroix and Barye, of Géricault and Bonington and de Vigny, and the
- rest of its heroes—he seems to have known nothing. That was his way.
- The new did not exist for him. A dissenter by birth and conviction, he
- yet cared only for the past, and the elder ‘glories of our blood and
- state’ were to him, not shadows but, the sole substantial things he
- could keep room for in the kingdom of his mind.
-
-Footnote 16:
-
- ’Tis a pleasure to remember that Lamb was with him to the end—was in
- his death-chamber in the very article of mortality. We have all read
- Carlyle on Lamb. The everlasting pity is that we shall never read
- Hazlitt on Carlyle.
-
-Footnote 17:
-
- Him Shelley calls ‘a solemn and unsexual man.’
-
-Footnote 18:
-
- Much as years afterwards, according to a certain Nicolardot, the
- expertest of their kind were ‘on the list’ of old Ste.-Beuve.
-
-Footnote 19:
-
- His grandson describes him as ‘physically incapable’ of any but a
- transient fidelity to anybody.
-
-Footnote 20:
-
- He confessed that one day he told it half a dozen times or so to
- persons he had never seen before: once, twice over to the same
- listener.
-
-Footnote 21:
-
- It cost Hazlitt a crown, perhaps less; and he arranged—apparently with
- Mrs. Hazlitt—to be taken in the act! After this the knowledge that Mr.
- and Mrs. Hazlitt took tea together, _pendente lite_, and that then and
- after his second espousals Hazlitt supplied this very reasonable woman
- with money, astonishes no more, but comes as a kind of anticlimax.
-
-Footnote 22:
-
- That damsel presently married in her station. She seems to have been a
- decent woman according to her lights, and to have lived up honestly to
- her ideals, such as they were.
-
-Footnote 23:
-
- There was a laughing devil in his sneer
- That raised emotions both of rage and fear;
- And where his frown of hatred darkly fell,
- Hope, withering, fled—and Mercy sighed farewell.
-
-Footnote 24:
-
- These details are Patmore’s, and, even if they be true, are not the
- whole truth. Hazlitt loved solitude and the country, had to write for
- a living, wrote with difficulty, and left no inconsiderable body of
- work.
-
-Footnote 25:
-
- What I mean is, that I have heard the best, as I believe, the last of
- the old century and the first of the new have shown.
-
-Footnote 26:
-
- ‘He always made the best pun and the best remark in the course of the
- evening. His serious conversation, like his serious writing, is his
- best. No one ever stammered out such fine, piquant, deep, eloquent
- things in half a dozen half-sentences as he does. His jests scald like
- tears: and he probes a question with a play upon words. What a keen,
- laughing, hare-brained vein of home-felt truth! What choice venom!’
-
-Footnote 27:
-
- It filled the valley like a mist,
- And still poured out its endless chant,
- And still it swells upon the ear,
- And wraps me in a golden trance,
- Drowning the noisy tumult of the world.
-
- . . . . . .
-
- Like sweetest warblings from a sacred grove ...
- Contending with the wild winds as they roar ...
- And the proud places of the insolent
- And the oppressor fell ...
- Such and so little is the mind of Man!
-
-Footnote 28:
-
- His summary of the fight between Hickman and Bill Neate is alone in
- literature, as also in the annals of the Ring. Jon Bee was an
- intelligent creature of his kind, and knew a very great deal more
- about pugilism than Hazlitt knew; but to contrast the two is to learn
- much. Badcock (which is Jon Bee) had seen (and worshipped) Jem
- Belcher, and had reported fights with an extreme contempt for Pierce
- Egan, the illiterate ass who gave us _Boxiana_. Hazlitt, however,
- looked on at the proceedings of Neate and the Gaslight Man exactly as
- he had looked on at divers creations of Edmund Kean. He saw the
- essentials in both expressions of human activity, and his treatment of
- both is fundamentally the same. In both he ignores the trivial: here
- the acting (in its lowest sense), there the hits that did not count.
- And thus, as he gives you only the vital touches, you know how and why
- Neate beat Hickman, and can tell the exact moment at which Hickman
- began to be a beaten man. ’Tis the same with his panegyric on
- Cavanagh, the fives-player. For a blend of gusto with understanding I
- know but one thing to equal with this: the note on Dr. Grace, which
- appeared in _The National Observer_; and the night that that was
- written, I sent the writer back to Hazlitt’s _Cavanagh_, and said to
- him ——! On the whole the _Dr. Grace_ is the better of the two. But it
- has scarce the incorruptible fatness of the _Cavanagh_. Gusto, though,
- is Hazlitt’s special attribute: he glories in what he likes, what he
- reads, what he feels, what he writes. He triumphed in his Kean, his
- Shakespeare, his Bill Neate, his Rousseau, his coffee-and-cream and
- _Love for Love_ in the inn-parlour at Alton. He relished things; and
- expressed them with a relish. That is his ‘note.’ Some others have
- relished only the consummate expression of nothing.
-
-Footnote 29:
-
- Listen, else, to Lamb himself: ‘Protesting against much that he has
- written, and some things which he chooses to do; judging him by his
- conversation which I enjoyed so long, and relished so deeply; or by
- his books, in those places where no clouding passion intervenes, I
- should belie my own conscience if I said less than that I think W. H.
- to be, in his natural and healthy state, one of the wisest and finest
- spirits breathing. So far from being ashamed of that intimacy which
- was betwixt us, it is my boast that I was able for so many years to
- have preserved it entire; and I think I shall go to my grave without
- finding or expecting to find such another companion.’ Thus does one
- Royalty celebrate the kingship and enrich the immortality of another.
-
-
-
-
- EDITORS’ PREFACE
-
-
-Two previous editions of Hazlitt’s works have been published: the
-Templeman edition, edited by the author’s son, and the seven volume
-edition in Bohn’s Library, edited by the author’s grandson, Mr. W. Carew
-Hazlitt. Valuable as these editions are from the exceptional advantages
-enjoyed by the respective editors, neither of them professes to be, or
-is, complete, and the aim of the present edition is to give for the
-first time an accurate text of the complete collected writings of
-Hazlitt with the exception of his _Life of Napoleon_.
-
-In the case of works published in book form by Hazlitt himself the
-latest edition published in his lifetime is here reprinted. Some obvious
-errors of the press have been corrected, but no attempt has been made to
-modernise or improve Hazlitt’s orthography or punctuation. He himself
-expressed contempt for ‘the collating of points and commas,’ and was
-probably a careless proof reader. He did not plume himself, as Boswell
-did, upon a deliberately adopted orthography, and his punctuation and
-use of italics were perhaps rather his printers’ fancy than his own.
-However that may be, the Editors feel that there is no justification for
-any tampering with his text. Essays not republished by Hazlitt himself
-are printed from the periodical or other publication in which they first
-appeared.
-
-It has been found impossible to avoid a good deal of repetition. All
-readers of Hazlitt know that he repeated not only phrases and sentences,
-but paragraphs and pages, as, _e.g._, in the case of the essay on ‘The
-Character of Pitt’ (see note to p. 125). A few of such cases might have
-been dealt with by means of cross references, but they are so numerous
-that the cross references would have become tiresome if only one of the
-identical or nearly identical passages had been printed.
-
-The notes chiefly contain bibliographical matter, concise biographical
-details of some of the persons mentioned by Hazlitt, and references to
-quotations. They also include several passages which Hazlitt omitted
-from his essays when he came to republish them in book form. Some of
-these are in themselves worthy of preservation; some help to explain the
-ferocity of certain contemporary allusions; and it is at any rate
-interesting to compare what he rejected with what he retained in moments
-of reflection.
-
-One word is necessary here as to the course which has been adopted with
-Hazlitt’s very numerous and very inaccurate quotations. In many cases
-his quotations are simply and unintentionally inaccurate, but very often
-he misquotes (if so it can be called) on purpose. That is to say, in his
-masterful way he presses quotations into his service, and if they are
-not exactly serviceable as they stand, he makes them so by changing a
-word here and there, or by blending two or more quotations together. He
-sometimes quotes (or misquotes) without using quotation marks, and the
-Editors would fain believe that he sometimes uses quotation marks to
-round off some unusually happy phrase of his own. The variations between
-Hazlitt and his original are given in the notes where it seemed
-desirable that they should be given, but in no case have his quotations
-been corrected or altered in the _text_.
-
-It has been a pleasure to the Editors to have the sympathy and
-co-operation of Mr. W. Carew Hazlitt, and they desire to thank him for
-his valuable assistance. At the same time they accept entire
-responsibility for the errors and failings which may be found in their
-work.
-
- A. R. W.
- A. G.
-
-
-
-
- THE ROUND TABLE
-
-
- BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
-
- _The Round Table_ was published in two 12mo volumes in 1817. The
- title-page runs as follows: ‘The Round Table: A Collection of Essays
- on Literature, Men, and Manners, By William Hazlitt. Edinburgh:
- Printed for Archibald Constable and Co. And Longman, Hurst, Rees,
- Orme, and Brown, London, 1817.’ Twelve of the fifty-two numbers were
- by Leigh Hunt, as the Advertisement explains. The essays consisted
- for the most part, but not entirely, of papers contributed to _The
- Examiner_ under the title of ‘The Round Table’ between January 1,
- 1815, and January 5, 1817. Hazlitt, however, included several essays
- taken from other columns of _The Examiner_ and from _The Morning
- Chronicle_ and other sources, and did not include the whole of his
- contributions to the Round Table series. A ‘third’ edition, edited
- by the author’s son, was published in one 12mo volume in 1841. In
- this edition many essays were omitted which had appeared, or were
- intended to appear, in the series of Hazlitt’s works then being
- published by Templeman; three essays contributed by Hazlitt to _The
- Liberal_ in 1822 were added; and Leigh Hunt’s essays were retained.
- Hazlitt’s essays as published in the two volumes of 1817 were
- restored, and Leigh Hunt’s essays were for the first time omitted in
- a later edition (8vo, 1871) edited by the author’s grandson, Mr. W.
- C. Hazlitt. The present edition is an exact reproduction of
- Hazlitt’s essays from the edition of 1817, except that a few obvious
- printer’s errors have been corrected. Of the contributions made by
- Hazlitt to the Round Table series in _The Examiner_ and not included
- in the two volumes of 1817 some were used by him in other
- publications, _Characters of Shakespear’s Plays_ (1817) and
- _Political Essays_ (1819), some were published in the posthumous
- _Winterslow_ (1850), and some have not been hitherto republished.
- The source of each of the following essays is indicated in the
- Notes. Gifford’s review of _The Round Table_ in _The Quarterly
- Review_ for April 1817 is dealt with by the author in _A Letter to
- William Gifford, Esq._, which is included in this volume.
-
-
- ADVERTISEMENT TO THE EDITION OF 1817
-
-The following work falls somewhat short of its title and original
-intention. It was proposed by my friend, Mr. Hunt, to publish a series
-of papers in the Examiner, in the manner of the early periodical
-Essayists, the Spectator and Tatler. These papers were to be contributed
-by various persons on a variety of subjects; and Mr. Hunt, as the
-Editor, was to take the characteristic or dramatic part of the work upon
-himself. I undertook to furnish occasional Essays and Criticisms; one or
-two other friends promised their assistance; but the essence of the work
-was to be miscellaneous. The next thing was to fix upon a title for it.
-After much doubtful consultation, that of THE ROUND TABLE was agreed
-upon as most descriptive of its nature and design. But our plan had been
-no sooner arranged and entered upon, than Buonaparte landed at Frejus,
-_et voila la Table Ronde dissoute_. Our little congress was broken up as
-well as the great one; Politics called off the attention of the Editor
-from the _Belles Lettres_; and the task of continuing the work fell
-chiefly upon the person who was least able to give life and spirit to
-the original design. A want of variety in the subjects and mode of
-treating them, is, perhaps, the least disadvantage resulting from this
-circumstance. All the papers, in the two volumes here offered to the
-public, were written by myself and Mr. Hunt, except a letter
-communicated by a friend in the seventeenth number. Out of the fifty-two
-numbers, twelve are Mr. Hunt’s, with the signatures L. H. or H. T. For
-all the rest I am answerable.
-
- W. HAZLITT.
-
- _January 5, 1817._
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
- PAGE
-
- On the Love of Life 1
-
- On Classical Education 4
-
- On the Tatler 7
-
- On Modern Comedy 10
-
- On Mr. Kean’s Iago 14
-
- On the Love of the Country 17
-
- On Posthumous Fame.—Whether Shakspeare was influenced by a Love
- of it? 21
-
- On Hogarth’s Marriage a-la-mode 25
-
- The Subject continued 28
-
- On Milton’s Lycidas 31
-
- On Milton’s Versification 36
-
- On Manner 41
-
- On the Tendency of Sects 47
-
- On John Buncle 51
-
- On the Causes of Methodism 57
-
- On the Midsummer Night’s Dream 61
-
- On the Beggar’s Opera 65
-
- On Patriotism—A Fragment 67
-
- On Beauty 68
-
- On Imitation 72
-
- On _Gusto_ 77
-
- On Pedantry 80
-
- The same Subject continued 84
-
- On the Character of Rousseau 88
-
- On Different Sorts of Fame 93
-
- Character of John Bull 97
-
- On Good-Nature 100
-
- On the Character of Milton’s Eve 105
-
- Observations on Mr. Wordsworth’s Poem The Excursion 111
-
- The same Subject continued 120
-
- Character of the late Mr. Pitt 125
-
- On Religious Hypocrisy 128
-
- On the Literary Character 131
-
- On Common-place Critics 136
-
- On the Catalogue Raisonné of the British Institution 140
-
- The same Subject continued 146
-
- On Poetical Versatility 151
-
- On Actors and Acting 153
-
- On the Same 156
-
- Why the Arts are not Progressive: A Fragment 160
-
-
-
-
- THE ROUND TABLE
-
-
- NO. 1.] ON THE LOVE OF LIFE [JAN. 15, 1815.
-
-It is our intention, in the course of these papers, occasionally to
-expose certain vulgar errors, which have crept into our reasonings on
-men and manners. Perhaps one of the most interesting of these, is that
-which relates to the source of our general attachment to life. We are
-not going to enter into the question, whether life is, on the whole, to
-be regarded as a blessing, though we are by no means inclined to adopt
-the opinion of that sage, who thought ‘that the best thing that could
-have happened to a man was never to have been born, and the next best to
-have died the moment after he came into existence.’ The common argument,
-however, which is made use of to prove the value of life, from the
-strong desire which almost every one feels for its continuance, appears
-to be altogether inconclusive. The wise and the foolish, the weak and
-the strong, the lame and the blind, the prisoner and the free, the
-prosperous and the wretched, the beggar and the king, the rich and the
-poor, the young and the old, from the little child who tries to leap
-over his own shadow, to the old man who stumbles blindfold on his grave,
-all feel this desire in common. Our notions with respect to the
-importance of life, and our attachment to it, depend on a principle,
-which has very little to do with its happiness or its misery.
-
-The love of life is, in general, the effect not of our enjoyments, but
-of our passions. We are not attached to it so much for its own sake, or
-as it is connected with happiness, as because it is necessary to action.
-Without life there can be no action—no objects of pursuit—no restless
-desires—no tormenting passions. Hence it is that we fondly cling to
-it—that we dread its termination as the close, not of enjoyment, but of
-hope. The proof that our attachment to life is not absolutely owing to
-the immediate satisfaction we find in it, is, that those persons are
-commonly found most loth to part with it who have the least enjoyment of
-it, and who have the greatest difficulties to struggle with, as losing
-gamesters are the most desperate. And farther, there are not many
-persons who, with all their pretended love of life, would not, if it had
-been in their power, have melted down the longest life to a few hours.
-‘The school-boy,’ says Addison, ‘counts the time till the return of the
-holidays; the minor longs to be of age; the lover is impatient till he
-is married.’—‘Hope and fantastic expectations spend much of our lives;
-and while with passion we look for a coronation, or the death of an
-enemy, or a day of joy, passing from fancy to possession without any
-intermediate notices, we throw away a precious year’ (Jeremy Taylor). We
-would willingly, and without remorse, sacrifice not only the present
-moment, but all the interval (no matter how long) that separates us from
-any favourite object. We chiefly look upon life, then, as the means to
-an end. Its common enjoyments and its daily evils are alike disregarded
-for any idle purpose we have in view. It should seem as if there were a
-few green sunny spots in the desert of life, to which we are always
-hastening forward: we eye them wistfully in the distance, and care not
-what perils or suffering we endure, so that we arrive at them at last.
-However weary we may be of the same stale round—however sick of the
-past—however hopeless of the future—the mind still revolts at the
-thought of death, because the fancied possibility of good, which always
-remains with life, gathers strength as it is about to be torn from us
-for ever, and the dullest scene looks bright compared with the darkness
-of the grave. Our reluctance to part with existence evidently does not
-depend on the calm and even current of our lives, but on the force and
-impulse of the passions. Hence that indifference to death which has been
-sometimes remarked in people who lead a solitary and peaceful life in
-remote and barren districts. The pulse of life in them does not beat
-strong enough to occasion any violent revulsion of the frame when it
-ceases. He who treads the green mountain turf, or he who sleeps beneath
-it, enjoys an almost equal quiet. The death of those persons has always
-been accounted happy, who had attained their utmost wishes, who had
-nothing left to regret or to desire. Our repugnance to death increases
-in proportion to our consciousness of having lived in vain—to the
-violence of our efforts, and the keenness of our disappointments—and to
-our earnest desire to find in the future, if possible, a rich amends for
-the past. We may be said to nurse our existence with the greatest
-tenderness, according to the pain it has cost us; and feel at every step
-of our varying progress the truth of that line of the poet—
-
- ‘An ounce of sweet is worth a pound of sour.’
-
-The love of life is in fact the sum of all our passions and of all our
-enjoyments; but these are by no means the same thing, for the vehemence
-of our passions is irritated, not less by disappointment than by the
-prospect of success. Nothing seems to be a match for this general
-tenaciousness of existence, but such an extremity either of bodily or
-mental suffering as destroys at once the power both of habit and
-imagination. In short, the question, whether life is accompanied with a
-greater quantity of pleasure or pain, may be fairly set aside as
-frivolous, and of no practical utility; for our attachment to life
-depends on our interest in it; and it cannot be denied that we have more
-interest in this moving, busy scene, agitated with a thousand hopes and
-fears, and checkered with every diversity of joy and sorrow, than in a
-dreary blank. To be something is better than to be nothing, because we
-can feel no interest in _nothing_. Passion, imagination, self-will, the
-sense of power, the very consciousness of our existence, bind us to
-life, and hold us fast in its chains, as by a magic spell, in spite of
-every other consideration. Nothing can be more philosophical than the
-reasoning which Milton puts into the mouth of the fallen angel:—
-
- ‘And that must end us, that must be our cure,
- To be no more; Sad cure: For who would lose,
- Though full of pain, this intellectual being,
- Those thoughts that wander through eternity,
- To perish rather, swallow’d up and lost
- In the wide womb of uncreated night,
- Devoid of sense and motion?’
-
-Nearly the same account may be given in answer to the question which has
-been asked, _Why so few tyrants kill themselves?_ In the first place,
-they are never satisfied with the mischief they have done, and cannot
-quit their hold of power, after all sense of pleasure is fled. Besides,
-they absurdly argue from the means of happiness placed within their
-reach to the end itself; and, dazzled by the pomp and pageantry of a
-throne, cannot relinquish the persuasion that they _ought_ to be happier
-than other men. The prejudice of opinion, which attaches us to life, is
-in them stronger than in others, and incorrigible to experience. The
-Great are life’s fools—dupes of the splendid shadows that surround them,
-and wedded to the very mockeries of opinion.
-
-Whatever is our situation or pursuit in life, the result will be much
-the same. The strength of the passion seldom corresponds to the pleasure
-we find in its indulgence. The miser ‘robs himself to increase his
-store’; the ambitious man toils up a slippery precipice only to be
-tumbled headlong from its height: the lover is infatuated with the
-charms of his mistress, exactly in proportion to the mortifications he
-has received from her. Even those who succeed in nothing, who, as it has
-been emphatically expressed—
-
- ‘Are made desperate by too quick a sense
- Of constant infelicity; cut off
- From peace like exiles, on some barren rock,
- Their life’s sad prison, with no more of ease,
- Than sentinels between two armies set’;
-
-are yet as unwilling as others to give over the unprofitable strife:
-their harassed feverish existence refuses rest, and frets the languor of
-exhausted hope into the torture of unavailing regret. The exile, who has
-been unexpectedly restored to his country and to liberty, often finds
-his courage fail with the accomplishment of all his wishes, and the
-struggle of life and hope ceases at the same instant.
-
-We once more repeat, that we do not, in the foregoing remarks, mean to
-enter into a comparative estimate of the value of human life, but merely
-to shew that the strength of our attachment to it is a very fallacious
-test of its happiness.
-
- W. H.
-
-
- NO. 2.] ON CLASSICAL EDUCATION [FEB. 12, 1815.
-
-The study of the Classics is less to be regarded as an exercise of the
-intellect, than as ‘a discipline of humanity.’ The peculiar advantage of
-this mode of education consists not so much in strengthening the
-understanding, as in softening and refining the taste. It gives men
-liberal views; it accustoms the mind to take an interest in things
-foreign to itself; to love virtue for its own sake; to prefer fame to
-life, and glory to riches; and to fix our thoughts on the remote and
-permanent, instead of narrow and fleeting objects. It teaches us to
-believe that there is something really great and excellent in the world,
-surviving all the shocks of accident and fluctuations of opinion, and
-raises us above that low and servile fear, which bows only to present
-power and upstart authority. Rome and Athens filled a place in the
-history of mankind, which can never be occupied again. They were two
-cities set on a hill, which could not be hid; all eyes have seen them,
-and their light shines like a mighty sea-mark into the abyss of time.
-
- ‘Still green with bays each ancient altar stands,
- Above the reach of sacrilegious hands;
- Secure from flames, from envy’s fiercer rage,
- Destructive war, and all-involving age.
-
- Hail, bards triumphant, born in happier days,
- Immortal heirs of universal praise!
- Whose honours with increase of ages grow,
- As streams roll down, enlarging as they flow!’
-
-It is this feeling, more than anything else, which produces a marked
-difference between the study of the ancient and modern languages, and
-which, from the weight and importance of the consequences attached to
-the former, stamps every word with a monumental firmness. By conversing
-with the _mighty dead_, we imbibe sentiment with knowledge; we become
-strongly attached to those who can no longer either hurt or serve us,
-except through the influence which they exert over the mind. We feel the
-presence of that power which gives immortality to human thoughts and
-actions, and catch the flame of enthusiasm from all nations and ages.
-
-It is hard to find in minds otherwise formed, either a real love of
-excellence, or a belief that any excellence exists superior to their
-own. Everything is brought down to the vulgar level of their own ideas
-and pursuits. Persons without education certainly do not want either
-acuteness or strength of mind in what concerns themselves, or in things
-immediately within their observation; but they have no power of
-abstraction, no general standard of taste, or scale of opinion. They see
-their objects always near, and never in the horizon. Hence arises that
-egotism which has been remarked as the characteristic of self-taught
-men, and which degenerates into obstinate prejudice or petulant
-fickleness of opinion, according to the natural sluggishness or activity
-of their minds. For they either become blindly bigoted to the first
-opinions they have struck out for themselves, and inaccessible to
-conviction; or else (the dupes of their own vanity and shrewdness) are
-everlasting converts to every crude suggestion that presents itself, and
-the last opinion is always the true one. Each successive discovery
-flashes upon them with equal light and evidence, and every new fact
-overturns their whole system. It is among this class of persons, whose
-ideas never extend beyond the feeling of the moment, that we find
-partizans, who are very honest men, with a total want of principle, and
-who unite the most hardened effrontery, and intolerance of opinion, to
-endless inconsistency and self-contradiction.
-
-A celebrated political writer of the present day, who is a great enemy
-to classical education, is a remarkable instance both of what can and
-what cannot be done without it.
-
-It has been attempted of late to set up a distinction between the
-education _of words_, and the education _of things_, and to give the
-preference in all cases to the latter. But, in the first place, the
-knowledge of things, or of the realities of life, is not easily to be
-taught except by things themselves, and, even if it were, is not so
-absolutely indispensable as it has been supposed. ‘The world is too much
-with us, early and late’; and the fine dream of our youth is best
-prolonged among the visionary objects of antiquity. We owe many of our
-most amiable delusions, and some of our superiority, to the grossness of
-mere physical existence, to the strength of our associations with words.
-Language, if it throws a veil over our ideas, adds a softness and
-refinement to them, like that which the atmosphere gives to naked
-objects. There can be no true elegance without taste in style. In the
-next place, we mean absolutely to deny the application of the principle
-of utility to the present question. By an obvious transposition of
-ideas, some persons have confounded a knowledge of useful things with
-useful knowledge. Knowledge is only useful in itself, as it exercises or
-gives pleasure to the mind: the only knowledge that is of use in a
-practical sense, is professional knowledge. But knowledge, considered as
-a branch of general education, can be of use only to the mind of the
-person acquiring it. If the knowledge of language produces pedants, the
-other kind of knowledge (which is proposed to be substituted for it) can
-only produce quacks. There is no question, but that the knowledge of
-astronomy, of chemistry, and of agriculture, is highly useful to the
-world, and absolutely necessary to be acquired by persons carrying on
-certain professions: but the practical utility of a knowledge of these
-subjects ends there. For example, it is of the utmost importance to the
-navigator to know exactly in what degree of longitude and latitude such
-a rock lies: but to us, sitting here about our Round Table, it is not of
-the smallest consequence whatever, whether the map-maker has placed it
-an inch to the right or to the left; we are in no danger of running
-against it. So the art of making shoes is a highly useful art, and very
-proper to be known and practised by some body: that is, by the
-shoemaker. But to pretend that every one else should be thoroughly
-acquainted with the whole process of this ingenious handicraft, as one
-branch of useful knowledge, would be preposterous. It is sometimes
-asked, What is the use of poetry? and we have heard the argument carried
-on almost like a parody on _Falstaff’s_ reasoning about Honour. ‘Can it
-set a leg? No. Or an arm? No. Or take away the grief of a wound? No.
-Poetry hath no skill in surgery then? No.’ It is likely that the most
-enthusiastic lover of poetry would so far agree to the truth of this
-statement, that if he had just broken a leg, he would send for a
-surgeon, instead of a volume of poems from a library. But, ‘they that
-are whole need not a physician.’ The reasoning would be well founded, if
-we lived in an hospital, and not in the world.
-
- W. H.
-
-
- NO. 3.] ON THE TATLER [MARCH 5, 1815.
-
-Of all the periodical Essayists, (our ingenious predecessors), the
-_Tatler_ has always appeared to us the most accomplished and agreeable.
-Montaigne, who was the father of this kind of personal authorship among
-the moderns, in which the reader is admitted behind the curtain, and
-sits down with the writer in his gown and slippers, was a most
-magnanimous and undisguised egotist; but Isaac Bickerstaff, Esq. was the
-more disinterested gossip of the two. The French author is contented to
-describe the peculiarities of his own mind and person, which he does
-with a most copious and unsparing hand. The English journalist,
-good-naturedly, lets you into the secret both of his own affairs and
-those of his neighbours. A young lady, on the other side of Temple Bar,
-cannot be seen at her glass for half a day together, but Mr. Bickerstaff
-takes due notice of it; and he has the first intelligence of the
-symptoms of the _belle_ passion appearing in any young gentleman at the
-west end of the town. The departures and arrivals of widows with
-handsome jointures, either to bury their grief in the country, or to
-procure a second husband in town, are regularly recorded in his pages.
-He is well acquainted with the celebrated beauties of the last age at
-the Court of Charles II. and the old gentleman often grows romantic in
-recounting the disastrous strokes which his youth suffered from the
-glances of their bright eyes and their unaccountable caprices. In
-particular, he dwells with a secret satisfaction on one of his
-mistresses who left him for a rival, and whose constant reproach to her
-husband, on occasion of any quarrel between them, was,—‘I, that might
-have married the famous Mr. Bickerstaff, to be treated in this manner!’
-The club at the _Trumpet_ consists of a set of persons as entertaining
-as himself. The cavalcade of the justice of the peace, the knight of the
-shire, the country squire, and the young gentleman, his nephew, who
-waited on him at his chambers, in such form and ceremony, seem not to
-have settled the order of their precedence to this hour; and we should
-hope the Upholsterer and his companions in the Green Park stand as fair
-a chance for immortality as some modern politicians. Mr. Bickerstaff
-himself is a gentleman and a scholar, a humourist and a man of the
-world; with a great deal of nice easy _naïveté_ about him. If he walks
-out and is caught in a shower of rain, he makes us amends for this
-unlucky accident, by a criticism on the shower in Virgil, and concludes
-with a burlesque copy of verses on a city-shower. He entertains us, when
-he dates from his own apartment, with a quotation from Plutarch or a
-moral reflection; from the Grecian coffeehouse with politics; and from
-Will’s or the Temple with the poets and players, the beaux and men of
-wit and pleasure about town. In reading the pages of the _Tatler_, we
-seem as if suddenly transported to the age of Queen Anne, of toupees and
-full-bottomed periwigs. The whole appearance of our dress and manners
-undergoes a delightful metamorphosis. We are surprised with the rustling
-of hoops and the glittering of paste buckles. The beaux and the belles
-are of a quite different species; we distinguish the dappers, the
-smarts, and the pretty fellows, as they pass; we are introduced to
-Betterton and Mrs. Oldfield behind the scenes; are made familiar with
-the persons of Mr. Penkethman and Mr. Bullock; we listen to a dispute at
-a tavern on the merits of the Duke of Marlborough or Marshal Turenne; or
-are present at the first rehearsal of a play by Vanbrugh, or the reading
-of a new poem by Mr. Pope.—The privilege of thus virtually transporting
-ourselves to past times, is even greater than that of visiting distant
-places. London, a hundred years ago, would be better worth seeing than
-Paris at the present moment.
-
-It may be said that all this is to be found, in the same or a greater
-degree, in the _Spectator_. We do not think so; or, at least, there is
-in the last work a much greater proportion of common-place matter. We
-have always preferred the _Tatler_ to the _Spectator_. Whether it is
-owing to our having been earlier or better acquainted with the one than
-the other, our pleasure in reading the two works is not at all in
-proportion to their comparative reputation. The _Tatler_ contains only
-half the number of volumes, and we will venture to say, at least an
-equal quantity of sterling wit and sense. ‘The first sprightly runnings’
-are there: it has more of the original spirit, more of the freshness and
-stamp of nature. The indications of character and strokes of humour are
-more true and frequent, the reflections that suggest themselves arise
-more from the occasion, and are less spun out into regular
-dissertations. They are more like the remarks which occur in sensible
-conversation, and less like a lecture. Something is left to the
-understanding of the reader. Steele seems to have gone into his closet
-only to set down what he observed out-of-doors; Addison seems to have
-spun out and wire-drawn the hints, which he borrowed from Steele, or
-took from nature, to the utmost. We do not mean to depreciate Addison’s
-talents, but we wish to do justice to Steele, who was, upon the whole, a
-less artificial and more original writer. The descriptions of Steele
-resemble loose sketches or fragments of a comedy; those of Addison are
-ingenious paraphrases on the genuine text. The characters of the club,
-not only in the _Tatler_, but in the _Spectator_, were drawn by Steele.
-That of Sir Roger de Coverley is among them. Addison has gained himself
-eternal honour by his manner of filling up this last character. Those of
-Will Wimble and Will Honeycomb are not a whit behind it in delicacy and
-felicity. Many of the most exquisite pieces in the _Tatler_ are also
-Addison’s, as the Court of Honour, and the Personification of Musical
-Instruments. We do not know whether the picture of the family of an old
-acquaintance, in which the children run to let Mr. Bickerstaff in at the
-door, and the one that loses the race that way turns back to tell the
-father that he is come,—with the nice gradation of incredulity in the
-little boy, who is got into _Guy of Warwick_ and _The Seven Champions_,
-and who shakes his head at the veracity of _Æsop’s Fables_,—is Steele’s
-or Addison’s.[30] The account of the two sisters, one of whom held her
-head up higher than ordinary, from having on a pair of flowered garters,
-and of the married lady who complained to the _Tatler_ of the neglect of
-her husband, are unquestionably Steele’s. If the _Tatler_ is not
-inferior to the _Spectator_ in manners and character, it is very
-superior to it in the interest of many of the stories. Several of the
-incidents related by Steele have never been surpassed in the
-heart-rending pathos of private distress. We might refer to those of the
-lover and his mistress when the theatre caught fire, of the bridegroom
-who, by accident, kills his bride on the day of their marriage, the
-story of Mr. Eustace and his wife, and the fine dream about his own
-mistress when a youth. What has given its superior popularity to the
-_Spectator_, is the greater gravity of its pretensions, its moral
-dissertations and critical reasonings, by which we confess we are less
-edified than by other things. Systems and opinions change, but nature is
-always true. It is the extremely moral and didactic tone of the
-_Spectator_ which makes us apt to think of Addison (according to
-Mandeville’s sarcasm) as ‘a parson in a tie-wig.’ Some of the moral
-essays are, however, exquisitely beautiful and happy. Such are the
-reflections in Westminster Abbey, on the Royal Exchange, and some very
-affecting ones on the death of a young lady. These, it must be allowed,
-are the perfection of elegant sermonising. His critical essays we do not
-think quite so good. We prefer Steele’s occasional selection of
-beautiful poetical passages, without any affectation of analysing their
-beauties, to Addison’s fine-spun theories. The best criticism in the
-_Spectator_, that on the _Cartoons_ of Raphael, is by Steele. We owed
-this acknowledgment to a writer who has so often put us in good humour
-with ourselves and every thing about us, when few things else could.[31]
-
- W. H.
-
-
- NO. 4.] ON MODERN COMEDY [AUG. 20, 1815.
-
-The question which has often been asked, _Why there are so few good
-modern Comedies?_ appears in a great measure to answer itself. It is
-because so many excellent Comedies have been written, that there are
-none written at present. Comedy naturally wears itself out—destroys the
-very food on which it lives; and by constantly and successfully exposing
-the follies and weaknesses of mankind to ridicule, in the end leaves
-itself nothing worth laughing at. It holds the mirror up to nature; and
-men, seeing their most striking peculiarities and defects pass in gay
-review before them, learn either to avoid or conceal them. It is not the
-criticism which the public taste exercises upon the stage, but the
-criticism which the stage exercises upon public manners, that is fatal
-to comedy, by rendering the subject-matter of it tame, correct, and
-spiritless. We are drilled into a sort of stupid decorum, and forced to
-wear the same dull uniform of outward appearance; and yet it is asked,
-why the Comic Muse does not point, as she was wont, at the peculiarities
-of our gait and gesture, and exhibit the picturesque contrast of our
-dress and costume, in all that graceful variety in which she delights.
-The genuine source of comic writing,
-
- ‘Where it must live, or have no life at all,’
-
-is undoubtedly to be found in the distinguishing peculiarities of men
-and manners. Now, this distinction can subsist, so as to be strong,
-pointed, and general, only while the manners of different classes are
-formed immediately by their particular circumstances, and the characters
-of individuals by their natural temperament and situation, without being
-everlastingly modified and neutralised by intercourse with the world—by
-knowledge and education. In a certain stage of society, men may be said
-to vegetate like trees, and to become rooted to the soil in which they
-grow. They have no idea of anything beyond themselves and their
-immediate sphere of action; they are, as it were, circumscribed, and
-defined by their particular circumstances; they are what their situation
-makes them, and nothing more. Each is absorbed in his own profession or
-pursuit, and each in his turn contracts that habitual peculiarity of
-manners and opinions, which makes him the subject of ridicule to others,
-and the sport of the Comic Muse. Thus the physician is nothing but a
-physician, the lawyer is a mere lawyer, the scholar degenerates into a
-pedant, the country squire is a different species of being from the fine
-gentleman, the citizen and the courtier inhabit a different world, and
-even the affectation of certain characters, in aping the follies or
-vices of their betters, only serves to show the immeasurable distance
-which custom or fortune has placed between them. Hence the early comic
-writers, taking advantage of this mixed and solid mass of ignorance,
-folly, pride, and prejudice, made those deep and lasting incisions into
-it,—have given those sharp and nice touches, that bold relief to their
-characters,—have opposed them in every variety of contrast and
-collision, of conscious self-satisfaction and mutual antipathy, with a
-power which can only find full scope in the same rich and inexhaustible
-materials. But in proportion as comic genius succeeds in taking off the
-mask from ignorance and conceit, as it teaches us to
-
- ‘See ourselves as others see us,’—
-
-in proportion as we are brought out on the stage together, and our
-prejudices clash one against the other, our sharp angular points wear
-off; we are no longer rigid in absurdity, passionate in folly, and we
-prevent the ridicule directed at our habitual foibles, by laughing at
-them ourselves.
-
-If it be said, that there is the same fund of absurdity and prejudice in
-the world as ever—that there are the same unaccountable perversities
-lurking at the bottom of every breast,—I should answer, be it so: but at
-least we keep our follies to ourselves as much as possible—we palliate,
-shuffle, and equivocate with them—they sneak into by-corners, and do
-not, like _Chaucer’s Canterbury Pilgrims_, march along the highroad, and
-form a procession—they do not entrench themselves strongly behind custom
-and precedent—they are not embodied in professions and ranks in
-life—they are not organised into a system—they do not openly resort to a
-standard, but are a sort of straggling nondescripts, that, like _Wart_,
-‘present no mark to the foeman.’ As to the gross and palpable
-absurdities of modern manners, they are too shallow and barefaced, and
-those who affect, are too little _serious_ in them, to make them worth
-the detection of the Comic Muse. They proceed from an idle, impudent
-affectation of folly in general, in the dashing _bravura_ style, not
-from an infatuation with any of its characteristic modes. In short, the
-proper object of ridicule is _egotism_; and a man cannot be a very great
-egotist who every day sees himself represented on the stage. We are
-deficient in Comedy, because we are without characters in real life—as
-we have no historical pictures, because we have no faces proper for
-them.
-
-It is, indeed, the evident tendency of all literature to generalise and
-_dissipate_ character, by giving men the same artificial education, and
-the same common stock of ideas; so that we see all objects from the same
-point of view, and through the same reflected medium;—we learn to exist,
-not in ourselves, but in books;—all men become alike mere
-readers—spectators, not actors in the scene, and lose all proper
-personal identity. The templar, the wit, the man of pleasure, and the
-man of fashion, the courtier and the citizen, the knight and the squire,
-the lover and the miser—_Lovelace_, _Lothario_, _Will Honeycomb_, and
-_Sir Roger de Coverley_, _Sparkish_ and _Lord Foppington_, _Western_ and
-_Tom Jones_, _My Father_, and _My Uncle Toby_, _Millamant_ and _Sir
-Sampson Legend_, _Don Quixote_ and _Sancho_, _Gil Blas_ and _Guzman
-d’Alfarache_, _Count Fathom_ and _Joseph Surface_,—have all met, and
-exchanged common-places on the barren plains of the _haute
-littérature_—toil slowly on to the Temple of Science, seen a long way
-off upon a level, and end in one dull compound of politics, criticism,
-chemistry, and metaphysics!
-
-We cannot expect to reconcile opposite things. If, for example, any of
-us were to put ourselves into the stage-coach from Salisbury to London,
-it is more than probable we should not meet with the same number of odd
-accidents, or ludicrous distresses on the road, that befell _Parson
-Adams_; but why, if we get into a common vehicle, and submit to the
-conveniences of modern travelling, should we complain of the want of
-adventures? Modern manners may be compared to a modern stage-coach: our
-limbs may be a little cramped with the confinement, and we may grow
-drowsy; but we arrive safe, without any very amusing or very sad
-accident, at our journey’s end.
-
-Again, the alterations which have taken place in conversation and dress
-in the same period, have been by no means favourable to Comedy. The
-present prevailing style of conversation is not _personal_, but critical
-and analytical. It consists almost entirely in the discussion of general
-topics, in dissertations on philosophy or taste: and Congreve would be
-able to derive no better hints from the conversations of our toilettes
-or drawing-rooms, for the exquisite raillery or poignant repartee of his
-dialogues, than from a deliberation of the Royal Society. In the same
-manner, the extreme simplicity and graceful uniformity of modern dress,
-however favourable to the arts, has certainly stript Comedy of one of
-its richest ornaments and most expressive symbols. The sweeping pall and
-buskin, and nodding plume, were never more serviceable to Tragedy, than
-the enormous hoops and stiff stays worn by the belles of former days
-were to the intrigues of Comedy. They assisted wonderfully in
-heightening the mysteries of the passion, and adding to the intricacy of
-the plot. Wycherley and Vanbrugh could not have spared the dresses of
-Vandyke. These strange fancy-dresses, perverse disguises, and
-counterfeit shapes, gave an agreeable scope to the imagination. ‘That
-sevenfold fence’ was a sort of foil to the lusciousness of the dialogue,
-and a barrier against the sly encroachments of _double entendre_. The
-greedy eye and bold hand of indiscretion were repressed, which gave a
-greater licence to the tongue. The senses were not to be gratified in an
-instant. Love was entangled in the folds of the swelling handkerchief,
-and the desires might wander for ever round the circumference of a
-quilted petticoat, or find a rich lodging in the flowers of a damask
-stomacher. There was room for years of patient contrivance, for a
-thousand thoughts, schemes, conjectures, hopes, fears, and wishes. There
-seemed no end of difficulties and delays; to overcome so many obstacles
-was the work of ages. A mistress was an angel concealed behind
-whalebone, flounces, and brocade. What an undertaking to penetrate
-through the disguise! What an impulse must it give to the blood, what a
-keenness to the invention, what a volubility to the tongue! ‘Mr. Smirk,
-you are a brisk man,’ was then the most significant commendation. But
-now-a-days—a woman can be _but undressed_!
-
-The same account might be extended to Tragedy. Aristotle has long since
-said, that Tragedy purifies the mind by terror and pity; that is,
-substitutes an artificial and intellectual interest for real passion.
-Tragedy, like Comedy, must therefore defeat itself; for its patterns
-must be drawn from the living models within the breast, from feeling or
-from observation; and the materials of Tragedy cannot be found among a
-people, who are the habitual spectators of Tragedy, whose interests and
-passions are not their own, but ideal, remote, sentimental, and
-abstracted. It is for this reason chiefly, we conceive, that the highest
-efforts of the Tragic Muse are in general the earliest; where the strong
-impulses of nature are not lost in the refinements and glosses of art;
-where the writers themselves, and those whom they saw about them, had
-‘warm hearts of flesh and blood beating in their bosoms, and were not
-embowelled of their natural entrails, and stuffed with paltry blurred
-sheets of paper.’ Shakspeare, with all his genius, could not have
-written as he did, if he had lived in the present times. Nature would
-not have presented itself to him in the same freshness and vigour; he
-must have seen it through all the refractions of successive dullness,
-and his powers would have languished in the dense atmosphere of logic
-and criticism. ‘Men’s minds,’ he somewhere says, ‘are parcel of their
-fortunes’; and his age was necessary to him. It was this which enabled
-him to grapple at once with Nature, and which stamped his characters
-with her image and superscription.
-
- W. H.
-
-
- NO. 5.] ON MR. KEAN’S IAGO [JULY 24, 1814.
-
-We certainly think Mr. Kean’s performance of the part of Iago one of the
-most extraordinary exhibitions on the stage. There is no one within our
-remembrance who has so completely foiled the critics as this celebrated
-actor: one sagacious person imagines that he must perform a part in a
-certain manner,—another virtuoso chalks out a different path for him;
-and when the time comes, he does the whole off in a way that neither of
-them had the least conception of, and which both of them are therefore
-very ready to condemn as entirely wrong. It was ever the trick of genius
-to be thus. We confess that Mr. Kean has thrown us out more than once.
-For instance, we are very much inclined to adopt the opinion of a
-contemporary critic, that his _Richard_ is not gay enough, and that his
-_Iago_ is not grave enough. This he may perhaps conceive to be the mere
-caprice of idle criticism; but we will try to give our reasons, and
-shall leave them to Mr. Kean’s better judgment. It is to be remembered,
-then, that _Richard_ was a princely villain, borne along in a sort of
-triumphal car of royal state, buoyed up with the hopes and privileges of
-his birth, reposing even on the sanctity of religion, trampling on his
-devoted victims without remorse, and who looked out and laughed from the
-high watch-tower of his confidence and his expectations on the
-desolation and misery he had caused around him. He held on his way,
-unquestioned, ‘hedged in with the divinity of kings,’ amenable to no
-tribunal, and abusing his power _in contempt of mankind_. But as for
-_Iago_, we conceive differently of him. He had not the same natural
-advantages. He was a mere adventurer in mischief, a pains-taking
-plodding knave, without patent or pedigree, who was obliged to work his
-up-hill way by wit, not by will, and to be the founder of his own
-fortune. He was, if we may be allowed a vulgar allusion, a sort of
-prototype of modern Jacobinism, who thought that talents ought to decide
-the place,—a man of ‘morbid sensibility,’ (in the fashionable phrase),
-full of distrust, of hatred, of anxious and corroding thoughts, and who,
-though he might assume a temporary superiority over others by superior
-adroitness, and pride himself in his skill, could not be supposed to
-assume it as a matter of course, as if he had been entitled to it from
-his birth. We do not here mean to enter into the characters of the two
-men, but something must be allowed to the difference of their
-situations. There might be the same insensibility in both as to the end
-in view, but there could not well be the same security as to the success
-of the means. _Iago_ had to pass through a different ordeal: he had no
-appliances and means to boot; no royal road to the completion of his
-tragedy. His pretensions were not backed by authority; they were not
-baptized at the font; they were not holy-waterproof. He had the whole to
-answer for in his own person, and could not shift the responsibility to
-the heads of others. Mr. Kean’s _Richard_ was, therefore, we think,
-deficient in something of that regal jollity and reeling triumph of
-success which the part would bear; but this we can easily account for,
-because it is the traditional commonplace idea of the character, that he
-is to ‘play the dog—to bite and snarl.’—The extreme unconcern and
-laboured levity of his _Iago_, on the contrary, is a refinement and
-original device of the actor’s own mind, and therefore deserves
-consideration. The character of _Iago_, in fact, belongs to a class of
-characters common to Shakspeare, and at the same time peculiar to
-him—namely, that of great intellectual activity, accompanied with a
-total want of moral principle, and therefore displaying itself at the
-constant expence of others, making use of reason as a pander to
-will—employing its ingenuity and its resources to palliate its own
-crimes and aggravate the faults of others, and seeking to confound the
-practical distinctions of right and wrong, by referring them to some
-overstrained standard of speculative refinement.—Some persons, more nice
-than wise, have thought the whole of the character of _Iago_ unnatural.
-Shakspeare, who was quite as good a philosopher as he was a poet,
-thought otherwise. He knew that the love of power, which is another name
-for the love of mischief, was natural to man. He would know this as well
-or better than if it had been demonstrated to him by a logical diagram,
-merely from seeing children paddle in the dirt, or kill flies for sport.
-We might ask those who think the character of _Iago_ not natural, why
-they go to see it performed, but from the interest it excites, the
-sharper edge which it sets on their curiosity and imagination? Why do we
-go to see tragedies in general? Why do we always read the accounts in
-the newspapers of dreadful fires and shocking murders, but for the same
-reason? Why do so many persons frequent executions and trials, or why do
-the lower classes almost universally take delight in barbarous sports
-and cruelty to animals, but because there is a natural tendency in the
-mind to strong excitement, a desire to have its faculties roused and
-stimulated to the utmost? Whenever this principle is not under the
-restraint of humanity, or the sense of moral obligation, there are no
-excesses to which it will not of itself give rise, without the
-assistance of any other motive, either of passion or self-interest.
-_Iago_ is only an extreme instance of the kind; that is, of diseased
-intellectual activity, with an almost perfect indifference to moral good
-or evil, or rather with a preference of the latter, because it falls
-more in with his favourite propensity, gives greater zest to his
-thoughts, and scope to his actions.—Be it observed, too, (for the sake
-of those who are for squaring all human actions by the maxims of
-Rochefoucault), that he is quite or nearly as indifferent to his own
-fate as to that of others; that he runs all risks for a trifling and
-doubtful advantage; and is himself the dupe and victim of his ruling
-passion—an incorrigible love of mischief—an insatiable craving after
-action of the most difficult and dangerous kind. Our ‘Ancient’ is a
-philosopher, who fancies that a lie that kills has more point in it than
-an alliteration or an antithesis; who thinks a fatal experiment on the
-peace of a family a better thing than watching the palpitations in the
-heart of a flea in an air-pump; who plots the ruin of his friends as an
-exercise for his understanding, and stabs men in the dark to prevent
-_ennui_. Now this, though it be sport, yet it is dreadful sport. There
-is no room for trifling and indifference, nor scarcely for the
-appearance of it; the very object of his whole plot is to keep his
-faculties stretched on the rack, in a state of watch and ward, in a sort
-of breathless suspense, without a moment’s interval of repose. He has a
-desperate stake to play for, like a man who fences with poisoned
-weapons, and has business enough on his hands to call for the whole
-stock of his sober circumspection, his dark duplicity, and insidious
-gravity. He resembles a man who sits down to play at chess, for the sake
-of the difficulty and complication of the game, and who immediately
-becomes absorbed in it. His amusements, if they are amusements, are
-severe and saturnine—even his wit blisters. His gaiety arises from the
-success of his treachery; his ease from the sense of the torture he has
-inflicted on others. Even, if other circumstances permitted it, the part
-he has to play with _Othello_ requires that he should assume the most
-serious concern, and something of the plausibility of a confessor. ‘His
-cue is villainous melancholy, with a sigh like Tom o’ Bedlam.’ He is
-repeatedly called ‘honest _Iago_,’ which looks as if there were
-something suspicious in his appearance, which admitted a different
-construction. The tone which he adopts in the scenes with _Roderigo_,
-_Desdemona_, and _Cassio_, is only a relaxation from the more arduous
-business of the play. Yet there is in all his conversation an inveterate
-misanthropy, a licentious keenness of perception, which is always
-sagacious of evil, and snuffs up the tainted scent of its quarry with
-rancorous delight. An exuberance of spleen is the essence of the
-character. The view which we have here taken of the subject (if at all
-correct) will not therefore justify the extreme alteration which Mr.
-Kean has introduced into the part. Actors in general have been struck
-only with the wickedness of the character, and have exhibited an
-assassin going to the place of execution. Mr. Kean has abstracted the
-wit of the character, and makes _Iago_ appear throughout an excellent
-good fellow, and lively bottle-companion. But though we do not wish him
-to be represented as a monster, or fiend, we see no reason why he should
-instantly be converted into a pattern of comic gaiety and good-humour.
-The light which illumines the character should rather resemble the
-flashes of lightning in the mirky sky, which make the darkness more
-terrible. Mr. Kean’s _Iago_ is, we suspect, too much in the sun. His
-manner of acting the part would have suited better with the character of
-_Edmund_ in _King Lear_, who, though in other respects much the same,
-has a spice of gallantry in his constitution, and has the favour and
-countenance of the ladies, which always gives a man the smug appearance
-of a bridegroom!
-
- W. H.
-
-
- NO. 6.] ON THE LOVE OF THE COUNTRY [NOV. 27, 1814.
-
- TO THE EDITOR OF THE ROUND TABLE.
-
-SIR,—I do not know that any one has ever explained satisfactorily the
-true source of our attachment to natural objects, or of that soothing
-emotion which the sight of the country hardly ever fails to infuse into
-the mind. Some persons have ascribed this feeling to the natural beauty
-of the objects themselves, others to the freedom from care, the silence
-and tranquillity which scenes of retirement afford—others to the healthy
-and innocent employments of a country life—others to the simplicity of
-country manners—and others to different causes; but none to the right
-one. All these causes may, I believe, have a share in producing this
-feeling; but there is another more general principle, which has been
-left untouched, and which I shall here explain, endeavouring to be as
-little sentimental as the subject will admit.
-
-Rousseau, in his Confessions, (the most valuable of all his works),
-relates, that when he took possession of his room at Annecy, at the
-house of his beloved mistress and friend, he found that he could see ‘a
-little spot of green’ from his window, which endeared his situation the
-more to him, because, he says, it was the first time he had had this
-object constantly before him since he left Boissy, the place where he
-was at school when a child.[32] Some such feeling as that here described
-will be found lurking at the bottom of all our attachments of this sort.
-Were it not for the recollections habitually associated with them,
-natural objects could not interest the mind in the manner they do. No
-doubt, the sky is beautiful; the clouds sail majestically along its
-bosom; the sun is cheering; there is something exquisitely graceful in
-the manner in which a plant or tree puts forth its branches; the motion
-with which they bend and tremble in the evening breeze is soft and
-lovely; there is music in the babbling of a brook; the view from the top
-of a mountain is full of grandeur; nor can we behold the ocean with
-indifference. Or, as the Minstrel sweetly sings—
-
- ‘Oh how can’st thou renounce the boundless store
- Of charms which Nature to her votary yields!
- The warbling woodland, the resounding shore,
- The pomp of groves, and garniture of fields;
- All that the genial ray of morning gilds,
- And all that echoes to the song of even,
- All that the mountain’s sheltering bosom shields,
- And all the dread magnificence of heaven,
- Oh how can’st thou renounce, and hope to be forgiven!’
-
-It is not, however, the beautiful and magnificent alone that we admire
-in Nature; the most insignificant and rudest objects are often found
-connected with the strongest emotions; we become attached to the most
-common and familiar images as to the face of a friend whom we have long
-known, and from whom we have received many benefits. It is because
-natural objects have been associated with the sports of our childhood,
-with air and exercise, with our feelings in solitude, when the mind
-takes the strongest hold of things, and clings with the fondest interest
-to whatever strikes its attention; with change of place, the pursuit of
-new scenes, and thoughts of distant friends: it is because they have
-surrounded us in almost all situations, in joy and in sorrow, in
-pleasure and in pain; because they have been one chief source and
-nourishment of our feelings, and a part of our being, that we love them
-as we do ourselves.
-
-There is, generally speaking, the same foundation for our love of Nature
-as for all our habitual attachments, namely, association of ideas. But
-this is not all. That which distinguishes this attachment from others is
-the transferable nature of our feelings with respect to physical
-objects; the associations connected with any one object extending to the
-whole class. My having been attached to any particular person does not
-make me feel the same attachment to the next person I may chance to
-meet; but, if I have once associated strong feelings of delight with the
-objects of natural scenery, the tie becomes indissoluble, and I shall
-ever after feel the same attachment to other objects of the same sort. I
-remember when I was abroad, the trees, and grass, and wet leaves,
-rustling in the walks of the Thuilleries, seemed to be as much English,
-to be as much the same trees and grass, that I had always been used to,
-as the sun shining over my head was the same sun which I saw in England;
-the faces only were foreign to me. Whence comes this difference? It
-arises from our always imperceptibly connecting the idea of the
-individual with man, and only the idea of the class with natural
-objects. In the one case, the external appearance or physical structure
-is the least thing to be attended to; in the other, it is every thing.
-The springs that move the human form, and make it friendly or adverse to
-me, lie hid within it. There is an infinity of motives, passions, and
-ideas contained in that narrow compass, of which I know nothing, and in
-which I have no share. Each individual is a world to himself, governed
-by a thousand contradictory and wayward impulses. I can, therefore, make
-no inference from one individual to another; nor can my habitual
-sentiments, with respect to any individual, extend beyond himself to
-others. But it is otherwise with respect to Nature. There is neither
-hypocrisy, caprice, nor mental reservation in her favours. Our
-intercourse with her is not liable to accident or change, interruption
-or disappointment. She smiles on us still the same. Thus, to give an
-obvious instance, if I have once enjoyed the cool shade of a tree, and
-been lulled into a deep repose by the sound of a brook running at its
-feet, I am sure that wherever I can find a tree and a brook, I can enjoy
-the same pleasure again. Hence, when I imagine these objects, I can
-easily form a mystic personification of the friendly power that inhabits
-them, Dryad or Naiad, offering its cool fountain or its tempting shade.
-Hence the origin of the Grecian mythology. All objects of the same kind
-being the same, not only in their appearance, but in their practical
-uses, we habitually confound them together under the same general idea;
-and, whatever fondness we may have conceived for one, is immediately
-placed to the common account. The most opposite kinds and remote trains
-of feeling gradually go to enrich the same sentiment; and in our love of
-Nature, there is all the force of individual attachment, combined with
-the most airy abstraction. It is this circumstance which gives that
-refinement, expansion, and wild interest to feelings of this sort, when
-strongly excited, which every one must have experienced who is a true
-lover of Nature. The sight of the setting sun does not affect me so much
-from the beauty of the object itself, from the glory kindled through the
-glowing skies, the rich broken columns of light, or the dying streaks of
-day, as that it indistinctly recalls to me numberless thoughts and
-feelings with which, through many a year and season, I have watched his
-bright descent in the warm summer evenings, or beheld him struggling to
-cast a ‘farewel sweet’ through the thick clouds of winter. I love to see
-the trees first covered with leaves in the spring, the primroses peeping
-out from some sheltered bank, and the innocent lambs running races on
-the soft green turf; because, at that birth-time of Nature, I have
-always felt sweet hopes and happy wishes—which have not been fulfilled!
-The dry reeds rustling on the side of a stream,—the woods swept by the
-loud blast,—the dark massy foliage of autumn,—the grey trunks and naked
-branches of the trees in winter,—the sequestered copse and wide extended
-heath,—the warm sunny showers, and December snows,—have all charms for
-me; there is no object, however trifling or rude, that has not, in some
-mood or other, found the way to my heart; and I might say, in the words
-of the poet,
-
- ‘To me the meanest flower that blows can give
- Thoughts that do often lie too deep for tears.’
-
-Thus Nature is a kind of universal home, and every object it presents to
-us an old acquaintance with unaltered looks.
-
- ——‘Nature did ne’er betray
- The heart that lov’d her, but through all the years
- Of this our life, it is her privilege
- To lead from joy to joy.’
-
-For there is that consent and mutual harmony among all her works, one
-undivided spirit pervading them throughout, that, if we have once knit
-ourselves in hearty fellowship to any of them, they will never
-afterwards appear as strangers to us, but, which ever way we turn, we
-shall find a secret power to have gone out before us, moulding them into
-such shapes as fancy loves, informing them with life and sympathy,
-bidding them put on their festive looks and gayest attire at our
-approach, and to pour all their sweets and choicest treasures at our
-feet. For him, then, who has well acquainted himself with Nature’s
-works, she wears always one face, and speaks the same well-known
-language, striking on the heart, amidst unquiet thoughts and the tumult
-of the world, like the music of one’s native tongue heard in some
-far-off country.
-
-We do not connect the same feelings with the works of art as with those
-of nature, because we refer them to man, and associate with them the
-separate interests and passions which we know belong to those who are
-the authors or possessors of them. Nevertheless, there are some such
-objects, as a cottage, or a village church, which excite in us the same
-sensations as the sight of nature, and which are, indeed, almost always
-included in descriptions of natural scenery.
-
- ‘Or from the mountain’s sides
- View wilds and swelling floods,
- And hamlets brown, and dim-discover’d spires,
- And hear their simple bell.’
-
-Which is in part, no doubt, because they are surrounded with natural
-objects, and, in a populous country, inseparable from them; and also
-because the human interest they excite relates to manners and feelings
-which are simple, common, such as all can enter into, and which,
-therefore, always produce a pleasing effect upon the mind.
-
- A.
-
-
- NO. 7.] ON POSTHUMOUS FAME,—WHETHER [MAY 22, 1814.
- SHAKSPEARE WAS INFLUENCED BY A LOVE
- OF IT?
-
-It has been much disputed whether Shakspeare was actuated by the love of
-fame, though the question has been thought by others not to admit of any
-doubt, on the ground that it was impossible for any man of great genius
-to be without this feeling. It was supposed, that that immortality,
-which was the natural inheritance of men of powerful genius, must be
-ever present to their minds, as the reward, the object, and the
-animating spring, of all their efforts. This conclusion does not appear
-to be well founded, and that for the following reasons:
-
-First, The love of fame is the offspring of taste, rather than of
-genius. The love of fame implies a knowledge of its existence. The men
-of the greatest genius, whether poets or philosophers, who lived in the
-first ages of society, only just emerging from the gloom of ignorance
-and barbarism, could not be supposed to have much idea of those long
-trails of lasting glory which they were to leave behind them, and of
-which there were as yet no examples. But, after such men, inspired by
-the love of truth and nature, have struck out those lights which become
-the gaze and admiration of after times,—when those who succeed in
-distant generations read with wondering rapture the works which the
-bards and sages of antiquity have bequeathed to them,—when they
-contemplate the imperishable power of intellect which survives the
-stroke of death and the revolutions of empire,—it is then that the
-passion for fame becomes an habitual feeling in the mind, and that men
-naturally wish to excite the same sentiments of admiration in others
-which they themselves have felt, and to transmit their names with the
-same honours to posterity. It is from the fond enthusiastic veneration
-with which we recal the names of the celebrated men of past times, and
-the idolatrous worship we pay to their memories, that we learn what a
-delicious thing fame is, and would willingly make any efforts or
-sacrifices to be thought of in the same way. It is in the true spirit of
-this feeling that a modern writer exclaims—
-
- ‘Blessings be with them, and eternal praise,
- The poets—who on earth have made us heirs
- Of truth and pure delight in deathless lays!
- Oh! might my name be number’d among theirs,
- Then gladly would I end my mortal days!’
-
-The love of fame is a species of emulation; or, in other words, the love
-of admiration is in proportion to the admiration with which the works of
-the highest genius have inspired us, to the delight we have received
-from their habitual contemplation, and to our participation in the
-general enthusiasm with which they have been regarded by mankind. Thus
-there is little of this feeling discoverable in the Greek writers, whose
-ideas of posthumous fame seem to have been confined to the glory of
-heroic actions; whereas the Roman poets and orators, stimulated by the
-reputation which their predecessors had acquired, and having those
-exquisite models constantly before their eyes, are full of it. So
-Milton, whose capacious mind was imbued with the rich stores of sacred
-and of classic lore, to whom learning opened her inmost page, and whose
-eye seemed to be ever bent back to the great models of antiquity, was,
-it is evident, deeply impressed with a feeling of lofty emulation, and a
-strong desire to produce some work of lasting and equal reputation:—
-
- ——‘Nor sometimes forget
- Those other two, equall’d with me in fate,
- So were I equall’d with them in renown,
- Blind Thamyris and blind Mæonides,
- And Tiresias and Phineus, prophets old.’[33]
-
-Spenser, who was a man of learning, had a high opinion of the regard due
-to ‘famous poets’ wit’; and Lord Bacon, whose vanity is as well known as
-his excessive adulation of that of others, asks, in a tone of proud
-exultation, ‘Have not the poems of Homer lasted five-and-twenty hundred
-years, and not a syllable of them is lost?’ Chaucer seems to have
-derived his notions of fame more immediately from the reputation
-acquired by the Italian poets, his contemporaries, which had at that
-time spread itself over Europe; while the latter, who were the first to
-unlock the springs of ancient learning, and who slaked their thirst of
-knowledge at that pure fountain-head, would naturally imbibe the same
-feeling from its highest source. Thus, Dante has conveyed the finest
-image that can perhaps be conceived of the power of this principle over
-the human mind, when he describes the heroes and celebrated men of
-antiquity as ‘serene and smiling,’ though in the shades of death,
-
- ——‘Because on earth their names
- In Fame’s eternal volume shine for aye.’
-
-But it is not so in Shakspeare. There is scarcely the slightest trace of
-any such feeling in his writings, nor any appearance of anxiety for
-their fate, or of a desire to perfect them or make them worthy of that
-immortality to which they were destined. And this indifference may be
-accounted for from the very circumstance, that he was almost entirely a
-man of genius, or that in him this faculty bore sway over every other:
-he was either not intimately conversant with the productions of the
-great writers who had gone before him, or at least was not much indebted
-to them: he revelled in the world of observation and of fancy; and
-perhaps his mind was of too prolific and active a kind to dwell with
-intense and continued interest on the images of beauty or of grandeur
-presented to it by the genius of others. He seemed scarcely to have an
-individual existence of his own, but to borrow that of others at will,
-and to pass successively through ‘every variety of untried being,’—to be
-now _Hamlet_, now _Othello_, now _Lear_, now _Falstaff_, now _Ariel_. In
-the mingled interests and feelings belonging to this wide range of
-imaginary reality, in the tumult and rapid transitions of this waking
-dream, the author could not easily find time to think of himself, nor
-wish to embody that personal identity in idle reputation after death, of
-which he was so little tenacious while living. To feel a strong desire
-that others should think highly of us, it is, in general, necessary that
-we should think highly of ourselves. There is something of egotism, and
-even pedantry, in this sentiment; and there is no author who was so
-little tinctured with these as Shakspeare. The passion for fame, like
-other passions, requires an exclusive and exaggerated admiration of its
-object, and attaches more consequence to literary attainments and
-pursuits than they really possess. Shakspeare had looked too much abroad
-into the world, and his views of things were of too universal and
-comprehensive a cast, not to have taught him to estimate the importance
-of posthumous fame according to its true value and relative proportions.
-Though he might have some conception of his future fame, he could not
-but feel the contrast between that and his actual situation; and,
-indeed, he complains bitterly of the latter in one of his sonnets.[34]
-He would perhaps think, that, to be the idol of posterity, when we are
-no more, was hardly a full compensation for being the object of the
-glance and scorn of fools while we are living; and that, in truth, this
-universal fame so much vaunted, was a vague phantom of blind enthusiasm;
-for what is the amount even of Shakspeare’s fame? That, in that very
-country which boasts his genius and his birth, perhaps not one person in
-ten has ever heard of his name, or read a syllable of his writings!
-
-We will add another observation in connection with this subject, which
-is, that men of the greatest genius produce their works with too much
-facility (and, as it were, spontaneously) to require the love of fame as
-a stimulus to their exertions, or to make them seem deserving of the
-admiration of mankind as their reward. It is, indeed, one characteristic
-mark of the highest class of excellence to appear to come naturally from
-the mind of the author, without consciousness or effort. The work seems
-like inspiration—to be the gift of some God or of the Muse. But it is
-the sense of difficulty which enhances the admiration of power, both in
-ourselves and in others. Hence it is that there is nothing so remote
-from vanity as true genius. It is almost as natural for those who are
-endowed with the highest powers of the human mind to produce the
-miracles of art, as for other men to breathe or move. Correggio, who is
-said to have produced some of his divinest works almost without having
-seen a picture, probably did not know that he had done anything
-extraordinary.
-
- Z.
-
-
- NO. 8.] ON HOGARTH’S MARRIAGE A-LA-MODE [JUNE 5, 1814.
-
-The superiority of the pictures of Hogarth, which we have seen in the
-late collection at the British Institution, to the common prints, is
-confined chiefly to the _Marriage a-la-Mode_. We shall attempt to
-illustrate a few of their most striking excellencies, more particularly
-with reference to the expression of character. Their merits are indeed
-so prominent, and have been so often discussed, that it may be thought
-difficult to point out any new beauties; but they contain so much truth
-of nature, they present the objects to the eye under so many aspects and
-bearings, admit of so many constructions, and are so pregnant with
-meaning, that the subject is in a manner inexhaustible.
-
-Boccacio, the most refined and sentimental of all the novel-writers, has
-been stigmatised as a mere inventor of licentious tales, because readers
-in general have only seized on those things in his works which were
-suited to their own taste, and have reflected their own grossness back
-upon the writer. So it has happened that the majority of critics having
-been most struck with the strong and decided expression in Hogarth, the
-extreme delicacy and subtle gradations of character in his pictures have
-almost entirely escaped them. In the first picture of the _Marriage
-a-la-Mode_, the three figures of the young Nobleman, his intended Bride,
-and her inamorato, the Lawyer, shew how much Hogarth excelled in the
-power of giving soft and effeminate expression. They have, however, been
-less noticed than the other figures, which tell a plainer story and
-convey a more palpable moral. Nothing can be more finely managed than
-the differences of character in these delicate personages. The Beau sits
-smiling at the looking-glass, with a reflected simper of
-self-admiration, and a languishing inclination of the head, while the
-rest of his body is perked up on his high heels with a certain air of
-tiptoe elevation. He is the Narcissus of the reign of George II., whose
-powdered peruke, ruffles, gold lace, and patches, divide his self-love
-unequally with his own person,—the true Sir Plume of his day;
-
- ‘Of amber-lidded snuff-box justly vain,
- And the nice conduct of a clouded cane.’
-
-There is the same felicity in the figure and attitude of the Bride,
-courted by the Lawyer. There is the utmost flexibility, and yielding
-softness in her whole person, a listless languor and tremulous suspense
-in the expression of her face. It is the precise look and air which Pope
-has given to his favourite Belinda, just at the moment of the _Rape of
-the Lock_. The heightened glow, the forward intelligence, and loosened
-soul of love in the same face, in the assignation scene before the
-masquerade, form a fine and instructive contrast to the delicacy,
-timidity, and coy reluctance expressed in the first. The Lawyer in both
-pictures is much the same—perhaps too much so—though even this unmoved,
-unaltered appearance may be designed as characteristic. In both cases he
-has ‘a person, and a smooth dispose, framed to make woman false.’ He is
-full of that easy good-humour and easy good opinion of himself, with
-which the sex are delighted. There is not a sharp angle in his face to
-obstruct his success, or give a hint of doubt or difficulty. His whole
-aspect is round and rosy, lively and unmeaning, happy without the least
-expense of thought, careless and inviting; and conveys a perfect idea of
-the uninterrupted glide and pleasing murmur of the soft periods that
-flow from his tongue.
-
-The expression of the Bride in the Morning Scene is the most highly
-seasoned, and at the same time the most vulgar in the series. The
-figure, face, and attitude of the Husband are inimitable. Hogarth has
-with great skill contrasted the pale countenance of the husband with the
-yellow whitish colour of the marble chimney-piece behind him, in such a
-manner as to preserve the fleshy tone of the former. The airy splendour
-of the view of the inner room in this picture is probably not exceeded
-by any of the productions of the Flemish School.
-
-The Young Girl in the third picture, who is represented as the victim of
-fashionable profligacy, is unquestionably one of the artist’s
-_chef-d’œuvres_. The exquisite delicacy of the painting is only
-surpassed by the felicity and subtlety of the conception. Nothing can be
-more striking than the contrast between the extreme softness of her
-person, and the hardened indifference of her character. The vacant
-stillness, the docility to vice, the premature suppression of youthful
-sensibility, the doll-like mechanism of the whole figure, which seems to
-have no other feeling but a sickly sense of pain,—shew the deepest
-insight into human nature, and into the effects of those refinements in
-depravity by which it has been good-naturedly asserted, that ‘vice loses
-half its evil in losing all its grossness.’ The story of this picture is
-in some parts very obscure and enigmatical. It is certain that the
-Nobleman is not looking straightforward to the Quack, whom he seems to
-have been threatening with his cane, but that his eyes are turned up
-with an ironical leer of triumph to the Procuress. The commanding
-attitude and size of this woman, the swelling circumference of her
-dress, spread out like a turkey-cock’s feathers,—the fierce,
-ungovernable, inveterate malignity of her countenance, which hardly
-needs the comment of the clasp-knife to explain her purpose, are all
-admirable in themselves, and still more so, as they are opposed to the
-mute insensibility, the elegant negligence of the dress, and the
-childish figure of the girl, who is supposed to be her _protégée_. As
-for the Quack, there can be no doubt entertained about him. His face
-seems as if it were composed of salve, and his features exhibit all the
-chaos and confusion of the most gross, ignorant, and impudent
-empiricism.
-
-The gradations of ridiculous affectation in the Music Scene are finely
-imagined and preserved. The preposterous, overstrained admiration of the
-Lady of Quality, the sentimental, insipid, patient delight of the Man
-with his hair in papers and sipping his tea,—the pert, smirking,
-conceited, half-distorted approbation of the figure next to him, the
-transition to the total insensibility of the round face in profile, and
-then to the wonder of the Negro-boy at the rapture of his Mistress, form
-a perfect whole. The sanguine complexion and flame-coloured hair of the
-female Virtuoso throw an additional light on the character. This is lost
-in the print. The continuing the red colour of the hair into the back of
-the chair has been pointed out as one of those instances of alliteration
-in colouring, of which these pictures are everywhere full. The gross
-bloated appearance of the Italian Singer is well relieved by the hard
-features of the instrumental performer behind him, which might be carved
-of wood. The Negro-boy, holding the chocolate, both in expression,
-colour, and execution, is a master-piece. The gay, lively derision of
-the other Negro boy, playing with the Actæon, is an ingenious contrast
-to the profound amazement of the first. Some account has already been
-given of the two lovers in this picture. It is curious to observe the
-infinite activity of mind which the artist displays on every occasion.
-An instance occurs in the present picture. He has so contrived the
-papers in the hair of the Bride, as to make them look almost like a
-wreath of half-blown flowers, while those which he has placed on the
-head of the musical Amateur very much resemble a _cheveux-de-frise_ of
-horns, which adorn and fortify the lack-lustre expression and mild
-resignation of the face beneath.
-
-The Night Scene is inferior to the rest of the series. The attitude of
-the Husband, who is just killed, is one in which it would be impossible
-for him to stand or even to fall. It resembles the loose pasteboard
-figures they make for children. The characters in the last picture, in
-which the Wife dies, are all masterly. We would particularly refer to
-the captious, petulant self-sufficiency of the Apothecary, whose face
-and figure are constructed on exact physiognomical principles, and to
-the fine example of passive obedience and non-resistance in the Servant,
-whom he is taking to task, and whose coat of green and yellow livery is
-as long and melancholy as his face. The disconsolate look, the haggard
-eyes, the open mouth, the comb sticking in the hair, the broken, gapped
-teeth, which, as it were, hitch in an answer—every thing about him
-denotes the utmost perplexity and dismay. The harmony and gradations of
-colour in this picture are uniformly preserved with the greatest nicety,
-and are well worthy the attention of the artist.
-
-
- NO. 9.] THE SUBJECT CONTINUED [JUNE 19, 1814.
-
-It has been observed, that Hogarth’s pictures are exceedingly unlike any
-other representations of the same kind of subjects—that they form a
-class, and have a character, peculiar to themselves. It may be worth
-while to consider in what this general distinction consists.
-
-In the first place, they are, in the strictest sense, _Historical_
-pictures; and if what Fielding says be true, that his novel of _Tom
-Jones_ ought to be regarded as an epic prose-poem, because it contained
-a regular developement of fable, manners, character, and passion, the
-compositions of Hogarth will, in like manner, be found to have a higher
-claim to the title of Epic Pictures than many which have of late
-arrogated that denomination to themselves. When we say that Hogarth
-treated his subjects historically, we mean that his works represent the
-manners and humours of mankind in action, and their characters by varied
-expression. Every thing in his pictures has life and motion in it. Not
-only does the business of the scene never stand still, but every feature
-and muscle is put into full play; the exact feeling of the moment is
-brought out, and carried to its utmost height, and then instantly seized
-and stamped on the canvass for ever. The expression is always taken _en
-passant_, in a state of progress or change, and, as it were, at the
-salient point. Besides the excellence of each individual face, the
-reflection of the expression from face to face, the contrast and
-struggle of particular motives and feelings in the different actors in
-the scene, as of anger, contempt, laughter, compassion, are conveyed in
-the happiest and most lively manner. His figures are not like the
-back-ground on which they are painted: even the pictures on the wall
-have a peculiar look of their own. Again, with the rapidity, variety,
-and scope of history, Hogarth’s heads have all the reality and
-correctness of portraits. He gives the extremes of character and
-expression, but he gives them with perfect truth and accuracy. This is,
-in fact, what distinguishes his compositions from all others of the same
-kind, that they are equally remote from caricature, and from mere still
-life. It of course happens in subjects from common life, that the
-painter can procure real models, and he can get them to sit as long as
-he pleases. Hence, in general, those attitudes and expressions have been
-chosen which could be assumed the longest; and in imitating which, the
-artist, by taking pains and time, might produce almost as complete
-fac-similes as he could of a flower or a flower-pot, of a damask
-curtain, or a china vase. The copy was as perfect and as uninteresting
-in the one case as in the other. On the contrary, subjects of drollery
-and ridicule affording frequent examples of strange deformity and
-peculiarity of features, these have been eagerly seized by another class
-of artists, who, without subjecting themselves to the laborious drudgery
-of the Dutch School and their imitators, have produced our popular
-caricatures, by rudely copying or exaggerating the casual irregularities
-of the human countenance. Hogarth has equally avoided the faults of both
-these styles, the insipid tameness of the one, and the gross vulgarity
-of the other, so as to give to the productions of his pencil equal
-solidity and effect. For his faces go to the very verge of caricature,
-and yet never (we believe in any single instance) go beyond it: they
-take the very widest latitude, and yet we always see the links which
-bind them to nature: they bear all the marks and carry all the
-conviction of reality with them, as if we had seen the actual faces for
-the first time, from the precision, consistency, and good sense, with
-which the whole and every part is made out. They exhibit the most
-uncommon features with the most uncommon expressions, but which are yet
-as familiar and intelligible as possible, because with all the boldness
-they have all the truth of nature. Hogarth has left behind him as many
-of these memorable faces, in their memorable moments, as perhaps most of
-us remember in the course of our lives, and has thus doubled the
-quantity of our observation.
-
-We have, in a former paper, attempted to point out the fund of
-observation, physical and moral, contained in one set of these pictures,
-the _Marriage a-la-Mode_. The rest would furnish as many topics to
-descant upon, were the patience of the reader as inexhaustible as the
-painter’s invention. But as this is not the case, we shall content
-ourselves with barely referring to some of those figures in the other
-pictures, which appear the most striking, and which we see not only
-while we are looking at them, but which we have before us at all other
-times. For instance, who having seen can easily forget that exquisite
-frost-piece of religion and morality, the antiquated Prude in the
-Morning Scene; or that striking commentary on the _good old times_, the
-little wretched appendage of a Foot-boy, who crawls half famished and
-half frozen behind her? The French Man and Woman in the Noon are the
-perfection of flighty affectation and studied grimace; the amiable
-_fraternisation_ of the two old Women saluting each other is not enough
-to be admired; and in the little Master, in the same national group, we
-see the early promise and personification of that eternal principle of
-wondrous self-complacency, proof against all circumstances, and which
-makes the French the only people who are vain even of being cuckolded
-and being conquered! Or shall we prefer to this the outrageous distress
-and unmitigated terrors of the Boy, who has dropped his dish of meat,
-and who seems red all over with shame and vexation, and bursting with
-the noise he makes? Or what can be better than the good housewifery of
-the Girl underneath, who is devouring the lucky fragments, or than the
-plump, ripe, florid, luscious look of the Servant-wench, embraced by a
-greasy rascal of an Othello, with her pye-dish tottering like her
-virtue, and with the most precious part of its contents running over?
-Just—no, not quite—as good is the joke of the Woman over-head, who,
-having quarrelled with her husband, is throwing their Sunday’s dinner
-out of the window, to complete this chapter of accidents of
-baked-dishes. The Husband in the Evening Scene is certainly as meek as
-any recorded in history; but we cannot say that we admire this picture,
-or the Night Scene after it. But then, in the Taste in High Life, there
-is that inimitable pair, differing only in sex, congratulating and
-delighting one another by ‘all the mutually reflected charities’ of
-folly and affectation, with the young Lady coloured like a rose,
-dandling her little, black, pug-faced, white-teethed, chuckling
-favourite, and with the portrait of Mons. Des Noyers in the back-ground,
-dancing in a grand ballet, surrounded by butterflies. And again, in the
-Election Dinner, is the immortal Cobler, surrounded by his Peers, who,
-‘frequent and full,’—
-
- ‘In _loud_ recess and _brawling_ conclave sit’:—
-
-the Jew in the second picture, a very Jew in grain—innumerable fine
-sketches of heads in the Polling for Votes, of which the Nobleman
-overlooking the caricaturist is the best; and then the irresistible
-tumultuous display of broad humour in the Chairing the Member, which is,
-perhaps, of all Hogarth’s pictures, the most full of laughable incidents
-and situations—the yellow, rusty-faced thresher, with his swinging
-flail, breaking the head of one of the Chairmen, and his redoubted
-antagonist, the Sailor, with his oak-stick, and stumping wooden leg, a
-supplemental cudgel—the persevering ecstasy of the hobbling Blind
-Fiddler, who, in the fray, appears to have been trod upon by the
-artificial excrescence of the honest Tar—Monsieur, the Monkey, with
-piteous aspect, speculating the impending disaster of the triumphant
-candidate, and his brother Bruin, appropriating the paunch—the
-precipitous flight of the Pigs, souse over head into the water, the fine
-Lady fainting, with vermilion lips, and the two Chimney-sweepers,
-satirical young rogues! We had almost forgot the Politician who is
-burning a hole through his hat with a candle in reading the newspaper;
-and the Chickens, in the _March to Finchley_, wandering in search of
-their lost dam, who is found in the pocket of the Serjeant. Of the
-pictures in the _Rake’s Progress_ in this collection, we shall not here
-say any thing, because we think them, on the whole, inferior to the
-prints, and because they have already been criticised by a writer, to
-whom we could add nothing, in a paper which ought to be read by every
-lover of Hogarth and of English genius.[35]
-
- W. H.
-
-
- NO. 10.] ON MILTON’S LYCIDAS [AUG. 6, 1815.
-
- ‘At last he rose, and twitch’d his mantle blue:
- To-morrow to fresh woods, and pastures new.’
-
-Of all Milton’s smaller poems, _Lycidas_ is the greatest favourite with
-us. We cannot agree to the charge which Dr. Johnson has brought against
-it, of pedantry and want of feeling. It is the fine emanation of
-classical sentiment in a youthful scholar—‘most musical, most
-melancholy.’ A certain tender gloom overspreads it, a wayward
-abstraction, a forgetfulness of his subject in the serious reflections
-that arise out of it. The gusts of passion come and go like the sounds
-of music borne on the wind. The loss of the friend whose death he
-laments seems to have recalled, with double force, the reality of those
-speculations which they had indulged together; we are transported to
-classic ground, and a mysterious strain steals responsive on the ear
-while we listen to the poet,
-
- ‘With eager thought warbling his Doric lay.’
-
-We shall proceed to give a few passages at length in support of our
-opinion. The first we shall quote is as remarkable for the truth and
-sweetness of the natural descriptions as for the characteristic elegance
-of the allusions:
-
- ‘Together both, ere the high lawns appear’d
- Under the opening eye-lids of the morn,
- We drove a-field; and both together heard
- What time the gray-fly winds her sultry horn,
- Battening our flocks with the fresh dews of night,
- Oft till the star that rose at evening bright
- Towards Heaven’s descent had sloped his westering wheel.
- Meanwhile the rural ditties were not mute,
- Temper’d to the oaten flute:
- Rough satyrs danced, and fauns with cloven heel
- From the glad sound would not be absent long,
- And old Dametas loved to hear our song.
- But oh the heavy change, now thou art gone,
- Now thou art gone, and never must return!
- Thee, shepherd, thee the woods and desert caves
- With wild thyme and the gadding vine o’ergrown,
- And all their echoes mourn.
- The willows and the hazel copses green
- Shall now no more be seen
- Fanning their joyous leaves to thy soft lays.
- As killing as the canker to the rose,
- Or taint-worm to the weanling herds that graze,
- Or frost to flowers that their gay wardrobe wear,
- When first the white-thorn blows;
- Such, Lycidas, thy loss to shepherd’s ear!’
-
-After the fine apostrophe on Fame which Phœbus is invoked to utter, the
-poet proceeds:
-
- ‘Oh fountain Arethuse, and thou honour’d flood,
- Smooth-sliding Mincius, crown’d with vocal reeds,
- That strain I heard was of a higher mood;
- But now my oat proceeds,
- And listens to the herald of the sea
- That came in Neptune’s plea.
- He ask’d the waves, and ask’d the felon winds,
- What hard mishap hath doom’d this gentle swain?
- And question’d every gust of rugged winds
- That blows from off each beaked promontory.
- They knew not of his story:
- And sage Hippotades their answer brings,
- That not a blast was from his dungeon stray’d,
- The air was calm, and on the level brine
- Sleek Panope with all her sisters play’d.’
-
-If this is art, it is perfect art; nor do we wish for anything better.
-The measure of the verse, the very sound of the names, would almost
-produce the effect here described. To ask the poet not to make use of
-such allusions as these, is to ask the painter not to dip in the colours
-of the rainbow, if he could. In fact, it is the common cant of criticism
-to consider every allusion to the classics, and particularly in a mind
-like Milton’s, as pedantry and affectation. Habit is a second nature;
-and, in this sense, the pedantry (if it is to be called so) of the
-scholastic enthusiast, who is constantly referring to images of which
-his mind is full, is as graceful as it is natural. It is not affectation
-in him to recur to ideas and modes of expression, with which he has the
-strongest associations, and in which he takes the greatest delight.
-Milton was as conversant with the world of genius before him as with the
-world of nature about him; the fables of the ancient mythology were as
-familiar to him as his dreams. To be a pedant, is to see neither the
-beauties of nature nor of art. Milton saw both; and he made use of the
-one only to adorn and give new interest to the other. He was a
-passionate admirer of nature; and, in a single couplet of his,
-describing the moon,—
-
- ‘Like one that had been led astray
- Through the heaven’s wide pathless way,’—
-
-there is more intense observation, and intense feeling of nature (as if
-he had gazed himself blind in looking at her), than in twenty volumes of
-descriptive poetry. But he added to his own observation of nature the
-splendid fictions of ancient genius, enshrined her in the mysteries of
-ancient religion, and celebrated her with the pomp of ancient names.
-
- ‘Next Camus, reverend sire, went footing slow,
- His mantle hairy and his bonnet sedge,
- Inwrought with figures dim, and on the edge
- Like to that sanguine flower inscrib’d with woe.
- Oh! who hath reft (quoth he) my dearest pledge?
- Last came, and last did go,
- The pilot of the Galilean lake.’
-
-There is a wonderful correspondence in the rhythm of these lines to the
-idea which they convey. This passage, which alludes to the clerical
-character of _Lycidas_, has been found fault with, as combining the
-truths of the Christian religion with the fictions of the heathen
-mythology. We conceive there is very little foundation for this
-objection, either in reason or good taste. We will not go so far as to
-defend Camoens, who, in his _Lusiad_, makes Jupiter send Mercury with a
-dream to propagate the Catholic religion; nor do we know that it is
-generally proper to introduce the two things in the same poem, though we
-see no objection to it here; but of this we are quite sure, that there
-is no inconsistency or natural repugnance between this poetical and
-religious faith in the same mind. To the understanding, the belief of
-the one is incompatible with that of the other; but in the imagination,
-they not only may, but do constantly co-exist. We will venture to go
-farther, and maintain, that every classical scholar, however orthodox a
-Christian he may be, is an honest Heathen at heart. This requires
-explanation. Whoever, then, attaches a reality to any idea beyond the
-mere name, has, to a certain extent, (though not an abstract), an
-habitual and practical belief in it. Now, to any one familiar with the
-names of the personages of the Heathen mythology, they convey a positive
-identity beyond the mere name. We refer them to something out of
-ourselves. It is only by an effort of abstraction that we divest
-ourselves of the idea of their reality; all our involuntary prejudices
-are on their side. This is enough for the poet. They impose on the
-imagination by all the attractions of beauty and grandeur. They come
-down to us in sculpture and in song. We have the same associations with
-them, as if they had really been; for the belief of the fiction in
-ancient times has produced all the same effects as the reality could
-have done. It was a reality to the minds of the ancient Greeks and
-Romans, and through them it is reflected to us. And, as we shape towers,
-and men, and armed steeds, out of the broken clouds that glitter in the
-distant horizon, so, throned above the ruins of the ancient world,
-Jupiter still nods sublime on the top of blue Olympus, Hercules leans
-upon his club, Apollo has not laid aside his bow, nor Neptune his
-trident; the sea-gods ride upon the sounding waves, the long procession
-of heroes and demi-gods passes in endless review before us, and still we
-hear
-
- ——‘The Muses in a ring
- Aye round about Jove’s altar sing:
-
- . . . . .
-
- Have sight of Proteus coming from the sea,
- And hear old Triton blow his wreathed horn.’
-
-If all these mighty fictions had really existed, they could have done no
-more for us! We shall only give one other passage from _Lycidas_; but we
-flatter ourselves that it will be a treat to our readers, if they are
-not already familiar with it. It is the passage which contains that
-exquisite description of the flowers:
-
- ‘Return, Alpheus; the dread voice is past
- That shrunk thy streams; return, Sicilian Muse,
- And call the vales, and bid them hither cast
- Their bells, and flow’rets of a thousand hues.
- Ye valleys low, where the mild whispers use
- Of shades and wanton winds and gushing brooks,
- On whose fresh lap the swart star sparely looks,
- Throw hither all your quaint enamell’d eyes,
- That on the green turf suck the honied showers,
- And purple all the ground with vernal flowers;
- Bring the rathe primrose that forsaken dies,
- The tufted crow-toe, and pale jessamine,
- The white pink, and the pansy freak’d with jet,
- The glowing violet,
- The musk-rose, and the well-attired woodbine,
- With cowslips wan, that hang the pensive head,
- And every flower that sad embroidery wears;
- Bid amaranthus all his beauty shed,
- And daffadillies fill their cups with tears,
- To strew the laureat hearse where Lycid lies.
- For so to interpose a little ease
- Let our frail thoughts dally with false surmise.
- Ay me! Whilst thee the shores and sounding seas
- Waft far away, where’er thy bones are hurl’d,
- Whether beyond the stormy Hebrides,
- Where thou perhaps under the whelming tide
- Visit’st the bottom of the monstrous world,
- Or whether thou, to our moist vows denied,
- Sleep’st by the fable of Bellerus old,
- Where the great vision of the guarded mount
- Looks towards Namancos and Bayona’s hold,
- Look homeward, Angel, now, and melt with ruth,
- And, O ye Dolphins, waft the hapless youth.’
-
-Dr. Johnson is very much offended at the introduction of these Dolphins;
-and indeed, if he had had to guide them through the waves, he would have
-made much the same figure as his old friend Dr. Burney does, swimming in
-the _Thames_ with his wig on, with the water-nymphs, in the picture by
-Barry at the Adelphi.
-
-There is a description of flowers in the _Winter’s Tale_, which we shall
-give as a parallel to Milton’s. We shall leave it to the reader to
-decide which is the finest; for we dare not give the preference.
-_Perdita_ says,
-
- ——‘Here’s flowers for you,
- Hot lavender, mints, savoury, marjoram,
- The marygold, that goes to bed with the sun,
- And with him rises weeping; these are flowers
- Of middle summer, and I think, they’re given
- To men of middle age. Y’are welcome.
-
- ‘_Camillo._ I should leave grazing, were I of your flock,
- And only live by gazing.
-
- ‘_Perdita._ Out, alas!
- You’d be so lean, that blasts of January
- Would blow you through and through. Now, my fairest friend,
- I would I had some flowers o’ th’ spring, that might
- Become your time of day: O Proserpina,
- For the flowers now, that, frighted, you let fall
- From Dis’s waggon! Daffodils,
- That come before the swallow dares, and take
- The winds of March with beauty; violets dim,
- But sweeter than the lids of Juno’s eyes,
- Or Cytherea’s breath; pale primroses,
- That die unmarried, ere they can behold
- Bright Phœbus in his strength, a malady
- Most incident to maids; bold oxlips, and
- The crown imperial; lilies of all kinds,
- The flower de lis being one. O, these I lack
- To make you garlands of, and my sweet friend,
- To strew him o’er and o’er.’
-
-Dr. Johnson’s general remark, that Milton’s genius had not room to show
-itself in his smaller pieces, is not well-founded. Not to mention
-_Lycidas_, the _Allegro_, and _Penseroso_, it proceeds on a false
-estimate of the merits of his great work, which is not more
-distinguished by strength and sublimity than by tenderness and beauty.
-The last were as essential qualities of Milton’s mind as the first. The
-battle of the angels, which has been commonly considered as the best
-part of the _Paradise Lost_, is the worst.
-
- W. H.
-
-
- NO. 11.] ON MILTON’S VERSIFICATION [AUG. 20, 1815.
-
-Milton’s works are a perpetual invocation to the Muses; a hymn to Fame.
-His religious zeal infused its character into his imagination; and he
-devotes himself with the same sense of duty to the cultivation of his
-genius, as he did to the exercise of virtue, or the good of his country.
-He does not write from casual impulse, but after a severe examination of
-his own strength, and with a determination to leave nothing undone which
-it is in his power to do. He always labours, and he almost always
-succeeds. He strives to say the finest things in the world, and he does
-say them. He adorns and dignifies his subject to the utmost. He
-surrounds it with all the possible associations of beauty or grandeur,
-whether moral, or physical, or intellectual. He refines on his
-descriptions of beauty, till the sense almost aches at them, and raises
-his images of terror to a gigantic elevation, that ‘makes Ossa like a
-wart.’ He has a high standard, with which he is constantly comparing
-himself, and nothing short of which can satisfy him:
-
- ——‘Sad task, yet argument
- Not less but more heroic than the wrath
- Of stern Achilles on his foe pursued,
- If answerable stile I can obtain.
- ——Unless an age too late, or cold
- Climate, or years, damp my intended wing.’
-
-Milton has borrowed more than any other writer; yet he is perfectly
-distinct from every other writer. The power of his mind is stamped on
-every line. He is a writer of centos, and yet in originality only
-inferior to Homer. The quantity of art shews the strength of his genius;
-so much art would have overloaded any other writer. Milton’s learning
-has all the effect of intuition. He describes objects of which he had
-only read in books, with the vividness of actual observation. His
-imagination has the force of nature. He makes words tell as pictures:
-
- ‘Him followed Rimmon, whose delightful seat
- Was fair Damascus, on the fertile banks
- Of Abbana and Pharphar, _lucid_ streams.’
-
-And again:
-
- ‘As when a vulture on Imaus bred,
- Whose snowy ridge the roving Tartar bounds,
- Dislodging from a region scarce of prey
- To gorge the flesh of lambs or yearling kids
- On hills where flocks are fed, _flies towards the springs
- Of Ganges or Hydaspes, Indian streams;
- But in his way lights on the barren plains
- Of Sericana, where Chineses drive
- With sails and wind their cany waggons light_.’
-
-Such passages may be considered as demonstrations of history. Instances
-might be multiplied without end. There is also a decided tone in his
-descriptions, an eloquent dogmatism, as if the poet spoke from thorough
-conviction, which Milton probably derived from his spirit of
-partisanship, or else his spirit of partisanship from the natural
-firmness and vehemence of his mind. In this Milton resembles Dante, (the
-only one of the moderns with whom he has anything in common), and it is
-remarkable that Dante, as well as Milton, was a political partisan. That
-approximation to the severity of impassioned prose which has been made
-an objection to Milton’s poetry, is one of its chief excellencies. It
-has been suggested, that the vividness with which he describes visible
-objects, might be owing to their having acquired a greater strength in
-his mind after the privation of sight; but we find the same palpableness
-and solidity in the descriptions which occur in his early poems. There
-is, indeed, the same depth of impression in his descriptions of the
-objects of the other senses. Milton had as much of what is meant by
-_gusto_ as any poet. He forms the most intense conceptions of things,
-and then embodies them by a single stroke of his pen. Force of style is
-perhaps his first excellence. Hence he stimulates us most in the
-reading, and less afterwards.
-
-It has been said that Milton’s ideas were musical rather than
-picturesque, but this observation is not true, in the sense in which it
-was meant. The ear, indeed, predominates over the eye, because it is
-more immediately affected, and because the language of music blends more
-immediately with, and forms a more natural accompaniment to, the
-variable and indefinite associations of ideas conveyed by words. But
-where the associations of the imagination are not the principal thing,
-the individual object is given by Milton with equal force and beauty.
-The strongest and best proof of this, as a characteristic power of his
-mind, is, that the persons of Adam and Eve, of Satan, etc., are always
-accompanied, in our imagination, with the grandeur of the naked figure;
-they convey to us the ideas of sculpture. As an instance, take the
-following:
-
- ——‘He soon
- Saw within ken a glorious Angel stand,
- The same whom John saw also in the sun:
- His back was turned, but not his brightness hid;
- Of beaming sunny rays a golden tiar
- Circled his head, nor less his locks behind
- Illustrious on his shoulders fledged with wings
- Lay waving round; on some great charge employ’d
- He seem’d, or fix’d in cogitation deep.
- Glad was the spirit impure, as now in hope
- To find who might direct his wand’ring flight
- To Paradise, the happy seat of man,
- His journey’s end, and our beginning woe.
- But first he casts to change his proper shape,
- Which else might work him danger or delay:
- And now a stripling cherub he appears,
- Not of the prime, yet such as in his face
- Youth smiled celestial, and to every limb
- Suitable grace diffus’d, so well he feign’d:
- Under a coronet his flowing hair
- In curls on either cheek play’d; wings he wore
- Of many a colour’d plume sprinkled with gold,
- His habit fit for speed succinct, and held
- Before his decent steps a silver wand.’
-
-The figures introduced here have all the elegance and precision of a
-Greek statue.
-
-Milton’s blank verse is the only blank verse in the language (except
-Shakspeare’s) which is readable. Dr. Johnson, who had modelled his ideas
-of versification on the regular sing-song of Pope, condemns the
-_Paradise Lost_ as harsh and unequal. We shall not pretend to say that
-this is not sometimes the case; for where a degree of excellence beyond
-the mechanical rules of art is attempted the poet must sometimes fail.
-But we imagine that there are more perfect examples in Milton of musical
-expression, or of an adaptation of the sound and movement of the verse
-to the meaning of the passage, than in all our other writers, whether of
-rhyme or blank verse, put together, (with the exception already
-mentioned). Spenser is the most harmonious of our poets, and Dryden is
-the most sounding and varied of our rhymists. But in neither is there
-anything like the same ear for music, the same power of approximating
-the varieties of poetical to those of musical rhythm, as there is in our
-great epic poet. The sound of his lines is moulded into the expression
-of the sentiment, almost of the very image. They rise or fall, pause or
-hurry rapidly on, with exquisite art, but without the least trick or
-affectation, as the occasion seems to require.
-
-The following are some of the finest instances:
-
- ——‘His hand was known
- In Heaven by many a tower’d structure high;
- Nor was his name unheard or unador’d
- In ancient Greece: and in the Ausonian land
- Men called him Mulciber: and how he fell
- From Heav’n, they fabled, thrown by angry Jove
- Sheer o’er the crystal battlements; from morn
- To noon he fell, from noon to dewy eve,
- A summer’s day; and with the setting sun
- Dropt from the zenith like a falling star
- On Lemnos, the Ægean isle: this they relate,
- Erring.’
-
- ——‘But chief the spacious hall
- Thick swarm’d, both on the ground and in the air,
- Brush’d with the hiss of rustling wings. As bees
- In spring time, when the sun with Taurus rides,
- Pour forth their populous youth about the hive
- In clusters; they among fresh dews and flow’rs
- Fly to and fro: or on the smoothed plank,
- The suburb of their straw-built citadel,
- New rubb’d with balm, expatiate and confer
- Their state affairs. So thick the airy crowd
- Swarm’d and were straiten’d; till the signal giv’n,
- Behold a wonder! They but now who seem’d
- In bigness to surpass earth’s giant sons,
- Now less than smallest dwarfs, in narrow room
- Throng numberless, like that Pygmean race
- Beyond the Indian mount, or fairy elves,
- Whose midnight revels by a forest side
- Or fountain, some belated peasant sees,
- Or dreams he sees, while over-head the moon
- Sits arbitress, and nearer to the earth
- Wheels her pale course: they on their mirth and dance
- Intent, with jocund music charm his ear;
- At once with joy and fear his heart rebounds.’
-
-We can only give another instance; though we have some difficulty in
-leaving off. ‘What a pity,’ said an ingenious person of our
-acquaintance, ‘that Milton had not the pleasure of reading _Paradise
-Lost_!’—
-
- ‘Round he surveys (and well might, where he stood
- So high above the circling canopy
- Of night’s extended shade) from eastern point
- Of Libra to the fleecy star that bears
- Andromeda far off Atlantic seas
- Beyond th’ horizon: then from pole to pole
- He views in breadth, and without longer pause
- Down right into the world’s first region throws
- His flight precipitant, and winds with ease
- Through the pure marble air his oblique way
- Amongst innumerable stars that shone
- Stars distant, but nigh hand seem’d other worlds;
- Or other worlds they seem’d or happy isles,’ etc.
-
-The verse, in this exquisitely modulated passage, floats up and down as
-if it had itself wings. Milton has himself given us the theory of his
-versification.
-
- ‘In many a winding bout
- Of linked sweetness long drawn out.’
-
-Dr. Johnson and Pope would have converted his vaulting Pegasus into a
-rocking-horse. Read any other blank verse but Milton’s,—Thomson’s,
-Young’s, Cowper’s, Wordsworth’s,—and it will be found, from the want of
-the same insight into ‘the hidden soul of harmony,’ to be mere lumbering
-prose.
-
- W. H.
-
- _To the President of The Round Table._
-
- SIR,—It is somewhat remarkable, that in _Pope’s Essay on Criticism_
- (not a very long poem) there are no less than half a score couplets
- rhyming to the word _sense_.
-
- ‘But of the two, less dangerous is the offence,
- To tire our patience than mislead our sense.’—_lines_ 3, 4.
-
- ‘In search of wit these lose their common sense,
- And then turn critics in their own defence.’—_l._ 28, 29.
-
- ‘Pride, where wit fails, steps in to our defence,
- And fills up all the mighty void of sense.’—_l._ 209, 10.
-
- ‘Some by old words to fame have made pretence,
- Ancients in phrase, mere moderns in their sense.’—_l._ 324, 5.
-
- ‘’Tis not enough no harshness gives offence;
- The sound must seem an echo to the sense.’—_l._ 364, 5.
-
- ‘At every trifle scorn to take offence;
- That always shews great pride or little sense.’—_l._ 386, 7.
-
- ‘Be silent always, when you doubt your sense,
- And speak, though sure, with seeming diffidence.’—_l._ 566, 7.
-
- ‘Be niggards of advice on no pretence,
- For the worst avarice is that of sense.’—_l._ 578, 9.
-
- ‘Strain out the last dull dropping of their sense,
- And rhyme with all the rage of impotence.’—_l._ 608, 9.
-
- ‘Horace still charms with graceful negligence,
- And without method talks us into sense.’—_l._ 653, 4.
-
- I am, Sir, your humble servant,
-
- A SMALL CRITIC.
-
-
- NO. 12.] ON MANNER [AUG. 27, 1815.
- [SEP. 3, 1815.
-
-It was the opinion of Lord Chesterfield, that _manner_ is of more
-importance than _matter_. This opinion seems at least to be warranted by
-the practice of the world; nor do we think it so entirely without
-foundation as some persons of more solid than showy pretensions would
-make us believe. In the remarks which we are going to make, we can
-scarcely hope to have any party very warmly on our side; for the most
-superficial coxcomb would be thought to owe his success to sterling
-merit.
-
-What any person says or does is one thing; the mode in which he says or
-does it is another. The last of these is what we understand by _manner_.
-In other words, manner is the involuntary or incidental expression given
-to our thoughts and sentiments by looks, tones, and gestures. Now, we
-are inclined in many cases to prefer this latter mode of judging of what
-passes in the mind to more positive and formal proof, were it for no
-other reason than that it is involuntary. ‘Look,’ says Lord
-Chesterfield, ‘in the face of the person to whom you are speaking, if
-you wish to know his real sentiments; for he can command his words more
-easily than his countenance.’ We may perform certain actions from
-design, or repeat certain professions by rote: the manner of doing
-either will in general be the best test of our sincerity. The mode of
-conferring a favour is often thought of more value than the favour
-itself. The actual obligation may spring from a variety of questionable
-motives, vanity, affectation, or interest: the cordiality with which the
-person from whom you have received it asks you how you do, or shakes you
-by the hand, does not admit of misinterpretation. The manner of doing
-any thing, is that which marks the degree and force of our internal
-impressions; it emanates most directly from our immediate or habitual
-feelings; it is that which stamps its life and character on any action;
-the rest may be performed by an automaton. What is it that makes the
-difference between the best and the worst actor, but the manner of going
-through the same part? The one has a perfect idea of the degree and
-force with which certain feelings operate in nature, and the other has
-no idea at all of the workings of passion. There would be no difference
-between the worst actor in the world and the best, placed in real
-circumstances, and under the influence of real passion. A writer may
-express the thoughts he has borrowed from another, but not with the same
-force, unless he enters into the true spirit of them. Otherwise he will
-resemble a person reading what he does not understand, whom you
-immediately detect by his wrong emphasis. His illustrations will be
-literally exact, but misplaced and awkward; he will not gradually warm
-with his subject, nor feel the force of what he says, nor produce the
-same effect on his readers. An author’s style is not less a criterion of
-his understanding than his sentiments. The same story told by two
-different persons shall, from the difference of the manner, either set
-the table in a roar, or not relax a feature in the whole company. We
-sometimes complain (perhaps rather unfairly) that particular persons
-possess more vivacity than wit. But we ought to take into the account,
-that their very vivacity arises from their enjoying the joke; and their
-humouring a story by drollery of gesture or archness of look, shews only
-that they are acquainted with the different ways in which the sense of
-the ludicrous expresses itself. It is not the mere dry jest, but the
-relish which the person himself has of it, with which we sympathise. For
-in all that tends to pleasure and excitement, the capacity for enjoyment
-is the principal point. One of the most pleasant and least tiresome
-persons of our acquaintance is a humourist, who has three or four quaint
-witticisms and proverbial phrases, which he always repeats over and
-over; but he does this with just the same vivacity and freshness as
-ever, so that you feel the same amusement with less effort than if he
-had startled his hearers with a succession of original conceits. Another
-friend of ours, who never fails to give vent to one or two real
-_jeu-d’esprits_ every time you meet him, from the pain with which he is
-delivered of them, and the uneasiness he seems to suffer all the rest of
-the time, makes a much more interesting than comfortable companion. If
-you see a person in pain for himself, it naturally puts you in pain for
-him. The art of pleasing consists in being pleased. To be amiable is to
-be satisfied with one’s self and others. Good-humour is essential to
-pleasantry. It is this circumstance, among others, that renders the wit
-of Rabelais so much more delightful than that of Swift, who, with all
-his satire, is ‘as dry as the remainder biscuit after a voyage.’ In
-society, good-temper and animal spirits are nearly everything. They are
-of more importance than sallies of wit, or refinements of understanding.
-They give a general tone of cheerfulness and satisfaction to the
-company. The French have the advantage over us in external manners. They
-breathe a lighter air, and have a brisker circulation of the blood. They
-receive and communicate their impressions more freely. The interchange
-of ideas costs them less. Their constitutional gaiety is a kind of
-natural intoxication, which does not require any other stimulus. The
-English are not so well off in this respect; and _Falstaff’s_
-commendation on sack was evidently intended for his countrymen,—whose
-‘learning is often a mere hoard of gold kept by a devil, till wine
-commences it, and sets it in act and use.’[36] More undertakings fail
-for want of spirit than for want of sense. Confidence gives a fool the
-advantage over a wise man. In general, a strong passion for any object
-will ensure success, for the desire of the end will point out the means.
-We apprehend that people usually complain, without reason, of not
-succeeding in various pursuits according to their deserts. Such persons,
-we will grant, may have great merit in all other respects; but in that
-in which they fail, it will almost invariably hold true, that they do
-not deserve to succeed. For instance, a person who has spent his life in
-thinking will acquire a habit of reflection; but he will neither become
-a dancer nor a singer, rich nor beautiful. In like manner, if any one
-complains of not succeeding in affairs of gallantry, we will venture to
-say, it is because he is not gallant. He has mistaken his talent—that’s
-all. If any person of exquisite sensibility makes love awkwardly, it is
-because he does not feel it as he should. One of these disappointed
-sentimentalists may very probably feel it upon reflection, may brood
-over it till he has worked himself up to a pitch of frenzy, and write
-his mistress the finest love-letters in the world, in her absence; but,
-be assured, he does not feel an atom of this passion in her presence.
-If, in paying her a compliment, he frowns with more than usual severity,
-or, in presenting her with a bunch of flowers, seems as if he was going
-to turn his back upon her, he can only expect to be laughed at for his
-pains; nor can he plead an excess of feeling as an excuse for want of
-common sense. She may say, ‘It is not with me you are in love, but with
-the ridiculous chimeras of your own brain. You are thinking of _Sophia
-Western_, or some other heroine, and not of me. Go and make love to your
-romances.’
-
-Lord Chesterfield’s character of the Duke of Marlborough is a good
-illustration of his general theory. He says, ‘Of all the men I ever knew
-in my life, (and I knew him extremely well), the late Duke of
-Marlborough possessed the graces in the highest degree, not to say
-engrossed them; for I will venture (contrary to the custom of profound
-historians, who always assign deep causes for great events) to ascribe
-the better half of the Duke of Marlborough’s greatness and riches to
-those graces. He was eminently illiterate; wrote bad English, and spelt
-it worse. He had no share of what is commonly called parts; that is, no
-brightness, nothing shining in his genius. He had most undoubtedly an
-excellent good plain understanding with sound judgment. But these alone
-would probably have raised him but something higher than they found him,
-which was page to King James II.‘s Queen. There the Graces protected and
-promoted him; for while he was Ensign of the Guards, the Duchess of
-Cleveland, then favourite mistress of Charles II., struck by these very
-graces, gave him £5000, with which he immediately bought an annuity of
-£500 a year, which was the foundation of his subsequent fortune. His
-figure was beautiful, but his manner was irresistible by either man or
-woman. It was by this engaging, graceful manner, that he was enabled,
-during all his wars, to connect the various and jarring powers of the
-grand alliance, and to carry them on to the main object of the war,
-notwithstanding their private and separate views, jealousies, and
-wrongheadedness. Whatever court he went to (and he was often obliged to
-go himself to some resty and refractory ones), he as constantly
-prevailed, and brought them into his measures.’[37]
-
-Grace in women has more effect than beauty. We sometimes see a certain
-fine self-possession, an habitual voluptuousness of character, which
-reposes on its own sensations, and derives pleasure from all around it,
-that is more irresistible than any other attraction. There is an air of
-languid enjoyment in such persons, ‘in their eyes, in their arms, and
-their hands, and their faces,’ which robs us of ourselves, and draws us
-by a secret sympathy towards them. Their minds are a shrine where
-pleasure reposes. Their smile diffuses a sensation like the breath of
-spring. Petrarch’s description of Laura answers exactly to this
-character, which is indeed the Italian character. Titian’s portraits are
-full of it: they seem sustained by sentiment, or as if the persons whom
-he painted sat to music. There is one in the Louvre (or there was) which
-had the most of this expression we ever remember. It did not look
-downward; ‘it looked forward, beyond this world.’ It was a look that
-never passed away, but remained unalterable as the deep sentiment which
-gave birth to it. It is the same constitutional character (together with
-infinite activity of mind) which has enabled the greatest man in modern
-history to bear his reverses of fortune with gay magnanimity, and to
-submit to the loss of the empire of the world with as little
-discomposure as if he had been playing a game at chess.
-
-Grace has been defined as the outward expression of the inward harmony
-of the soul. Foreigners have more of this than the English,—particularly
-the people of the southern and eastern countries. Their motions appear
-(like the expression of their countenances) to have a more immediate
-communication with their feelings. The inhabitants of the northern
-climates, compared with these children of the sun, are like hard
-inanimate machines, with difficulty set in motion. A strolling gipsy
-will offer to tell your fortune with a grace and an insinuation of
-address that would be admired in a court.[38] The Hindoos that we see
-about the streets are another example of this. They are a different race
-of people from ourselves. They wander about in a luxurious dream. They
-are like part of a glittering procession,—like revellers in some gay
-carnival. Their life is a dance, a measure; they hardly seem to tread
-the earth, but are borne along in some more genial element, and bask in
-the radiance of brighter suns. We may understand this difference of
-climate by recollecting the difference of our own sensations at
-different times, in the fine glow of summer, or when we are pinched and
-dried up by a northeast wind. Even the foolish Chinese, who go about
-twirling their fans and their windmills, shew the same delight in them
-as the children they collect around them. The people of the East make it
-their business to sit and think and do nothing. They indulge in endless
-reverie; for the incapacity of enjoyment does not impose on them the
-necessity of action. There is a striking example of this passion for
-castle-building in the story of the glass-man in the Arabian Nights.
-
-After all, we would not be understood to say that manner is every thing.
-Nor would we put Euclid or Sir Isaac Newton on a level with the first
-_petit-maître_ we might happen to meet. We consider _Æsop’s Fables_ to
-have been a greater work of genius than Fontaine’s translation of them;
-though we doubt whether we should not prefer Fontaine, for his style
-only, to Gay, who has shewn a great deal of original invention. The
-elegant manners of people of fashion have been objected to us to shew
-the frivolity of external accomplishments, and the facility with which
-they are acquired. As to the last point, we demur. There is no class of
-people who lead so laborious a life, or who take more pains to cultivate
-their minds as well as persons, than people of fashion. A young lady of
-quality, who has to devote so many hours a day to music, so many to
-dancing, so many to drawing, so many to French, Italian, etc., certainly
-does not pass her time in idleness; and these accomplishments are
-afterwards called into action by every kind of external or mental
-stimulus, by the excitements of pleasure, vanity, and interest. A
-Ministerial or Opposition lord goes through more drudgery than half a
-dozen literary hacks; nor does a reviewer by profession read half the
-same number of productions as a modern fine lady is obliged to labour
-through. We confess, however, we are not competent judges of the degree
-of elegance or refinement implied in the general tone of fashionable
-manners. The successful experiment made by _Peregrine Pickle_, in
-introducing his strolling mistress into genteel company, does not
-redound greatly to their credit. In point of elegance of external
-appearance, we see no difference between women of fashion and women of a
-different character, who dress in the same style.
-
- T. T.
-
-
- NO. 13.] ON THE TENDENCY OF SECTS [SEP. 10, 1815.
-
-There is a natural tendency in sects to narrow the mind.
-
-The extreme stress laid upon differences of minor importance, to the
-neglect of more general truths and broader views of things, gives an
-inverted bias to the understanding; and this bias is continually
-increased by the eagerness of controversy, and captious hostility to the
-prevailing system. A party-feeling of this kind once formed will
-insensibly communicate itself to other topics; and will be too apt to
-lead its votaries to a contempt for the opinions of others, a jealousy
-of every difference of sentiment, and a disposition to arrogate all
-sound principle as well as understanding to themselves, and those who
-think with them. We can readily conceive how such persons, from fixing
-too high a value on the practical pledge which they have given of the
-independence and sincerity of their opinions, come at last to entertain
-a suspicion of every one else as acting under the shackles of prejudice
-or the mask of hypocrisy. All those who have not given in their
-unqualified protest against received doctrines and established
-authority, are supposed to labour under an acknowledged incapacity to
-form a rational determination on any subject whatever. Any argument, not
-having the presumption of singularity in its favour, is immediately set
-aside as nugatory. There is, however, no prejudice so strong as that
-which arises from a fancied exemption from all prejudice. For this last
-implies not only the practical conviction that it is right, but the
-theoretical assumption that it cannot be wrong. From considering all
-objections as in this manner ‘null and void,’ the mind becomes so
-thoroughly satisfied with its own conclusions, as to render any further
-examination of them superfluous, and confounds its exclusive pretensions
-to reason with the absolute possession of it. Those who, from their
-professing to submit everything to the test of reason, have acquired the
-name of rational Dissenters, have their weak sides as well as other
-people: nor do we know of any class of disputants more disposed to take
-their opinions for granted, than those who call themselves Freethinkers.
-A long habit of objecting to every thing establishes a monopoly in the
-right of contradiction; a prescriptive title to the privilege of
-starting doubts and difficulties in the common belief, without being
-liable to have our own called in question. There cannot be a more
-infallible way to prove that we must be in the right, than by
-maintaining roundly that every one else is in the wrong! Not only the
-opposition of sects to one another, but their unanimity among
-themselves, strengthens their confidence in their peculiar notions. They
-feel themselves invulnerable behind the double fence of sympathy with
-themselves, and antipathy to the rest of the world. Backed by the
-zealous support of their followers, they become equally intolerant with
-respect to the opinions of others, and tenacious of their own. They
-fortify themselves within the narrow circle of their new-fangled
-prejudices; the whole exercise of their right of private judgment is
-after a time reduced to the repetition of a set of watchwords, which
-have been adopted as the Shiboleth of the party; and their extremest
-points of faith pass as current as the beadroll and legends of the
-Catholics, or St. Athanasius’s Creed, and the Thirty-nine Articles. We
-certainly are not going to recommend the establishment of articles of
-faith, or implicit assent to them, as favourable to the progress of
-philosophy; but neither has the spirit of opposition to them this
-tendency, as far as relates to its immediate effects, however useful it
-may be in its remote consequences. The spirit of controversy substitutes
-the irritation of personal feeling for the independent exertion of the
-understanding; and when this irritation ceases, the mind flags for want
-of a sufficient stimulus to urge it on. It discharges all its energy
-with its spleen. Besides, this perpetual cavilling with the opinions of
-others, detecting petty flaws in their arguments, calling them to a
-literal account for their absurdities, and squaring their doctrines by a
-pragmatical standard of our own, is necessarily adverse to any great
-enlargement of mind, or original freedom of thought.[39] The constant
-attention bestowed on a few contested points, by at once flattering our
-pride, our prejudices, and our indolence, supersedes more general
-inquiries; and the bigoted controversialist, by dint of repeating a
-certain formula of belief, shall not only convince himself that all
-those who differ from him are undoubtedly wrong on that point, but that
-their knowledge on all others must be comparatively slight and
-superficial. We have known some very worthy and well-informed biblical
-critics, who, by virtue of having discovered that one was not three, or
-that the same body could not be in two places at once, would be disposed
-to treat the whole Council of Trent, with Father Paul at their head,
-with very little deference, and to consider Leo X. with all his court,
-as no better than drivellers. Such persons will hint to you, as an
-additional proof of his genius, that Milton was a non-conformist, and
-will excuse the faults of Paradise Lost, as Dr. Johnson magnified them,
-because the author was a republican. By the all-sufficiency of their
-merits in believing certain truths which have been ‘hid from ages,’ they
-are elevated, in their own imagination, to a higher sphere of intellect,
-and are released from the necessity of pursuing the more ordinary tracks
-of inquiry. Their faculties are imprisoned in a few favourite dogmas,
-and they cannot break through the trammels of a sect. Hence we may
-remark a hardness and setness in the ideas of those who have been
-brought up in this way, an aversion to those finer and more delicate
-operations of the intellect, of taste and genius, which require greater
-flexibility and variety of thought, and do not afford the same
-opportunity for dogmatical assertion and controversial cabal. The
-distaste of the Puritans, Quakers, etc. to pictures, music, poetry, and
-the fine arts in general, may be traced to this source as much as to
-their affected disdain of them, as not sufficiently spiritual and remote
-from the gross impurity of sense.[40]
-
-We learn from the interest we take in things, and according to the
-number of things in which we take an interest. Our ignorance of the real
-value of different objects and pursuits, will in general keep pace with
-our contempt for them. To set out with denying common sense to every one
-else, is not the way to be wise ourselves; nor shall we be likely to
-learn much, if we suppose that no one can teach us any thing worth
-knowing. Again, a contempt for the habits and manners of the world is as
-prejudicial as a contempt for their opinions. A puritanical abhorrence
-of every thing that does not fall in with our immediate prejudices and
-customs, must effectually cut us off, not only from a knowledge of the
-world and of human nature, but of good and evil, of vice and virtue; at
-least, if we can credit the assertion of Plato, (which, to some degree,
-we do), that the knowledge of every thing implies the knowledge of its
-opposite. ‘There is some soul of goodness in things evil.’ A most
-respectable sect among ourselves (we mean the Quakers) have carried this
-system of negative qualities nearly to perfection. They labour
-diligently, and with great success, to exclude all ideas from their
-minds which they might have in common with others. On the principle that
-evil communications corrupt good manners, they retain a virgin purity of
-understanding, and laudable ignorance of all liberal arts and sciences;
-they take every precaution, and keep up a perpetual quarantine against
-the infection of other people’s vices—or virtues; they pass through the
-world like figures cut out of pasteboard or wood, turning neither to the
-right nor the left; and their minds are no more affected by the example
-of the follies, the pursuits, the pleasures, or the passions of mankind,
-than the clothes which they wear. Their ideas want _airing_; they are
-the worse for not being used: for fear of soiling them, they keep them
-folded up and laid by in a sort of mental clothes-press, through the
-whole of their lives. They take their notions on trust from one
-generation to another, (like the scanty cut of their coats), and are so
-wrapped up in these traditional maxims, and so pin their faith on them,
-that one of the most intelligent of this class of people, not long ago,
-assured us that ‘war was a thing that was going quite out of fashion’!
-This abstract sort of existence may have its advantages, but it takes
-away all the ordinary sources of a moral imagination, as well as
-strength of intellect. Interest is the only link that connects them with
-the world. We can understand the high enthusiasm and religious devotion
-of monks and anchorites, who gave up the world and its pleasures to
-dedicate themselves to a sublime contemplation of a future state. But
-the sect of the Quakers, who have transplanted the maxims of the desert
-into manufacturing towns and populous cities, who have converted the
-solitary cells of the religious orders into counting-houses, their beads
-into ledgers, and keep a regular debtor and creditor account between
-this world and the next, puzzle us mightily! The Dissenter is not vain,
-but conceited: that is, he makes up by his own good opinion for the want
-of the cordial admiration of others. But this often stands their
-self-love in so good stead that they need not envy their dignified
-opponents who repose on lawn sleeves and ermine. The unmerited obloquy
-and dislike to which they are exposed has made them cold and reserved in
-their intercourse with society. The same cause will account for the
-dryness and general homeliness of their style. They labour under a sense
-of the want of public sympathy. They pursue truth, for its own sake,
-into its private recesses and obscure corners. They have to dig their
-way along a narrow under-ground passage. It is not their object to
-shine; they have none of the usual incentives of vanity, light, airy,
-and ostentatious. Archiepiscopal Sees and mitres do not glitter in their
-distant horizon. They are not wafted on the wings of fancy, fanned by
-the breath of popular applause. The voice of the world, the tide of
-opinion, is not with them. They do not therefore aim at _éclat_, at
-outward pomp and shew. They have a plain ground to work upon, and they
-do not attempt to embellish it with idle ornaments. It would be in vain
-to strew the flowers of poetry round the borders of the Unitarian
-controversy.
-
-There is one quality common to all sectaries, and that is, a principle
-of strong fidelity. They are the safest partisans, and the steadiest
-friends. Indeed, they are almost the only people who have any idea of an
-abstract attachment either to a cause or to individuals, from a sense of
-duty, independently of prosperous or adverse circumstances, and in spite
-of opposition.[41]
-
- Z.
-
-
- NO. 14.] ON JOHN BUNCLE [SEPT. 17, 1815.
-
-_John Buncle_ is the English _Rabelais_. This is an author with whom,
-perhaps, many of our readers are not acquainted, and whom we therefore
-wish to introduce to their notice. As most of our countrymen delight in
-English Generals and in English Admirals, in English Courtiers and in
-English Kings, so our great delight is in English authors.
-
-The soul of Francis Rabelais passed into John Amory, the author of _The
-Life and Adventures of John Buncle_. Both were physicians, and enemies
-of too much gravity. Their great business was to enjoy life. Rabelais
-indulges his spirit of sensuality in wine, in dried neats’ tongues, in
-Bologna sausages, in botargos. John Buncle shews the same symptoms of
-inordinate satisfaction in tea and bread and butter. While Rabelais
-roared with Friar John and the Monks, John Buncle gossiped with the
-ladies; and with equal and uncontrolled gaiety. These two authors
-possessed all the insolence of health, so that their works give a fillip
-to the constitution; but they carried off the exuberance of their
-natural spirits in different ways. The title of one of Rabelais’
-chapters (and the contents answer to the title) is—‘How they chirped
-over their cups.’ The title of a corresponding chapter in John Buncle
-would run thus: ‘The author is invited to spend the evening with the
-divine Miss Hawkins, and goes accordingly, with the delightful
-conversation that ensued.’ Natural philosophers are said to extract
-sun-beams from ice: our author has performed the same feat upon the
-cold, quaint subtleties of theology. His constitutional alacrity
-overcomes every obstacle. He converts the thorns and briars of
-controversial divinity into a bed of roses. He leads the most refined
-and virtuous of their sex through the mazes of inextricable problems
-with the air of a man walking a minuet in a drawing-room; mixes up in
-the most natural and careless manner the academy of compliments with the
-rudiments of algebra; or passes with rapturous indifference from the
-First of St. John and a disquisition on the Logos, to the no less
-metaphysical doctrines of the principle of self-preservation, or the
-continuation of the species. _John Buncle_ is certainly one of the most
-singular productions in the language; and herein lies its peculiarity.
-It is a Unitarian romance; and one in which the soul and body are
-equally attended to. The hero is a great philosopher, mathematician,
-anatomist, chemist, philologist, and divine, with a good appetite, the
-best spirits, and an amorous constitution, who sets out on a series of
-strange adventures to propagate his philosophy, his divinity, and his
-species, and meets with a constant succession of accomplished females,
-adorned with equal beauty, wit, and virtue, who are always ready to
-discuss all kinds of theoretical and practical points with him. His
-angels (and all his women are angels) have all taken their degrees in
-more than one science: love is natural to them. He is sure to find
-
- ‘A mistress and a saint in every grove.’
-
-Pleasure and business, wisdom and mirth, take their turns with the most
-agreeable regularity. _A jocis ad seria, in seriis vicissim ad jocos
-transire._ After a chapter of calculations in fluxions, or on the
-descent of tongues, the lady and gentleman fall from Platonics to
-hoydening, in a manner as truly edifying as anything in the scenes of
-Vanbrugh or Sir George Etherege. No writer ever understood so well the
-art of relief. The effect is like travelling in Scotland, and coming all
-of a sudden to a spot of habitable ground. His mode of making love is
-admirable. He takes it quite easily, and never thinks of a refusal. His
-success gives him confidence, and his confidence gives him success. For
-example: in the midst of one of his rambles in the mountains of
-Cumberland, he unexpectedly comes to an elegant country-seat, where,
-walking on the lawn with a book in her hand, he sees a most enchanting
-creature, the owner of the mansion: our hero is on fire, leaps the ha-ha
-which separates them, presents himself before the lady with an easy but
-respectful air, begs to know the subject of her meditation, they enter
-into conversation, mutual explanations take place, a declaration of love
-is made, and the wedding-day is fixed for the following Tuesday. Our
-author now leads a life of perfect happiness with his beautiful Miss
-Noel, in a charming solitude, for a few weeks; till, on his return from
-one of his rambles in the mountains, he finds her a corpse. He ‘_sits
-with his eyes shut for seven days_,’ absorbed in silent grief; he then
-bids adieu to melancholy reflections, not being one of that sect of
-philosophers who think that ‘man was made to mourn,’—takes horse and
-sets out for the nearest watering-place. As he alights at the first inn
-on the road, a lady dressed in a rich green riding-habit steps out of a
-coach, John Buncle hands her into the inn, they drink tea together, they
-converse, they find an exact harmony of sentiment, a declaration of love
-follows as a matter of course, and that day week they are married.
-Death, however, contrives to keep up the ball for him; he marries seven
-wives in succession, and buries them all. In short, John Buncle’s
-gravity sat upon him with the happiest indifference possible. He danced
-the hays with religion and morality with the ease of a man of fashion
-and of pleasure. He was determined to see fair-play between grace and
-nature, between his immortal and his mortal part, and in case of any
-difficulty, upon the principle of ‘first come, first served,’ made sure
-of the present hour. We sometimes suspect him of a little hypocrisy, but
-upon a closer inspection, it appears to be only an affectation of
-hypocrisy. His fine constitution comes to his relief, and floats him
-over the shoals and quicksands that lie in his way, ‘most dolphin-like.’
-You see him from mere happiness of nature chuckling with inward
-satisfaction in the midst of his periodical penances, his grave
-grimaces, his death’s-heads, and _memento moris_.
-
- ——‘And there the antic sits
- Mocking his state, and grinning at his pomp.’
-
-As men make use of olives to give a relish to their wine, so John Buncle
-made use of philosophy to give a relish to life. He stops in a ball-room
-at Harrowgate to moralise on the small number of faces that appeared
-there out of those he remembered some years before: all were gone whom
-he saw at a still more distant period; but this casts no damper on his
-spirits, and he only dances the longer and better for it. He suffers
-nothing unpleasant to remain long upon his mind. He gives, in one place,
-a miserable description of two emaciated valetudinarians whom he met at
-an inn, supping a little mutton-broth with difficulty, but he
-immediately contrasts himself with them in fine relief. ‘While I beheld
-things with astonishment, the servant,’ he says, ‘brought in dinner—a
-pound of rump-steaks and a quart of green peas, two cuts of bread, a
-tankard of strong beer, and a pint of port-wine; _with a fine appetite,
-I soon despatched my mess, and over my wine, to help digestion, began to
-sing the following lines_!’ The astonishment of the two strangers was
-now as great as his own had been.
-
-We wish to enable our readers to judge for themselves of the style of
-our whimsical moralist, but are at a loss what to chuse—whether his
-account of his man O’Fin; or of his friend Tom Fleming; or of his being
-chased over the mountains by robbers, ‘whisking before them like the
-wind away,’ as if it were high sport; or his address to the Sun, which
-is an admirable piece of serious eloquence; or his character of six
-Irish gentlemen, Mr. Gollogher, Mr. Gallaspy, Mr. Dunkley, Mr. Makins,
-Mr. Monaghan, and Mr. O’Keefe, the last ‘descended from the Irish kings,
-and first cousin to the great O’Keefe, who was buried not long ago in
-Westminster Abbey.’ He professes to give an account of these Irish
-gentlemen, ‘for the honour of Ireland, and as they were curiosities of
-the human kind.’ Curiosities, indeed, but not so great as their
-historian!
-
-‘Mr. Makins was the only one of the set who was not tall and handsome.
-He was a very low, thin man, not four feet high, and had but one eye,
-with which he squinted most shockingly. But as he was matchless on the
-fiddle, sung well, and chatted agreeably, he was a favourite with the
-ladies. They preferred ugly Makins (as he was called) to many very
-handsome men. He was a Unitarian.’
-
-‘Mr. Monaghan was an honest and charming fellow. This gentleman and Mr.
-Dunkley married ladies they fell in love with at Harrowgate Wells;
-Dunkley had the fair Alcmena, Miss Cox of Northumberland; and Monaghan,
-Antiope with haughty charms, Miss Pearson of Cumberland. They lived very
-happy many years, and their children, I hear, are settled in Ireland.’
-
-Gentle reader, here is the character of Mr. Gallaspy:
-
-‘Gallaspy was the tallest and strongest man I have ever seen, well made,
-and very handsome: had wit and abilities, sung well, and talked with
-great sweetness and fluency, but was so extremely wicked that it were
-better for him if he had been a natural fool. By his vast strength and
-activity, his riches and eloquence, few things could withstand him. He
-was the most profane swearer I have known: fought every thing, whored
-every thing, and drank seven in hand: that is, seven glasses so placed
-between the fingers of his right hand, that, in drinking, the liquor
-fell into the next glasses, and thereby he drank out of the first glass
-seven glasses at once. This was a common thing, I find from a book in my
-possession, in the reign of Charles II., in the madness that followed
-the restoration of that profligate and worthless prince.[42] But this
-gentleman was the only man I ever saw who could or would attempt to do
-it; and he made but one gulp of whatever he drank. He did not swallow a
-fluid like other people, but if it was a quart, poured it in as from
-pitcher to pitcher. When he smoked tobacco, he always blew two pipes at
-once, one at each corner of his mouth, and threw the smoke out at both
-his nostrils. He had killed two men in duels before I left Ireland, and
-would have been hanged, but that it was his good fortune to be tried
-before a judge who never let any man suffer for killing another in this
-manner. (This was the late Sir John St. Leger.) He debauched all the
-women he could, and many whom he could not corrupt....’ The rest of this
-passage would, we fear, be too rich for the Round Table, as we cannot
-insert it, in the manner of Mr. Buncle, in a sandwich of theology.
-Suffice it to say, that the candour is greater than the candour of
-Voltaire’s _Candide_, and the modesty equal to Colley Cibber’s.
-
-To his friend Mr. Gollogher, he consecrates the following irresistible
-_petit souvenir_:
-
-‘He might, if he had pleased, have married any one of the most
-illustrious and richest women in the kingdom; but he had an aversion to
-matrimony, and could not bear the thoughts of a wife. Love and a bottle
-were his taste: he was, however, the most honourable of men in his
-amours, and never abandoned any woman in distress, as too many men of
-fortune do, when they have gratified desire. All the distressed were
-ever sharers in Mr. Gollogher’s fine estate, and especially the girls he
-had taken to his breast. He provided happily for them all, and left
-nineteen daughters he had by several women, a thousand pounds each. This
-was acting with a temper worthy of a man; _and to the memory of the
-benevolent Tom Gollogher, I devote this memorandum_.’
-
-Lest our readers should form rather a coarse idea of our author from the
-foregoing passages, we will conclude with another list of friends in a
-different style:
-
-‘The Conniving-house (as the gentlemen of Trinity called it in my time,
-and long after) was a little public-house, kept by Jack Macklean, about
-a quarter of a mile beyond Rings-end, on the top of the beach, within a
-few yards of the sea. Here we used to have the finest fish at all times;
-and, in the season, green peas, and all the most excellent vegetables.
-The ale here was always extraordinary, and everything the best; which,
-with its delightful situation, rendered it a delightful place of a
-summer’s evening. Many a delightful evening have I passed in this pretty
-thatched house with the famous Larry Grogan, who played on the bagpipes
-extremely well; dear Jack Lattin, matchless on the fiddle, and the most
-agreeable of companions; that ever-charming young fellow, Jack Wall, the
-most worthy, the most ingenious, the most engaging of men, the son of
-Counsellor Maurice Wall; and many other delightful fellows, who went in
-the days of their youth to the shades of eternity. When I think of them
-and their evening songs—‘_We will go to Johnny Macklean’s, to try if his
-ale be good or no_,’ etc. and that years and infirmities begin to
-oppress me—What is life!’
-
-We have another English author, very different from the last mentioned
-one, but equal in _naïveté_, and in the perfect display of personal
-character; we mean Isaac Walton, who wrote the _Complete Angler_. That
-well-known work has an extreme simplicity, and an extreme interest,
-arising out of its very simplicity. In the description of a fishing
-tackle you perceive the piety and humanity of the author’s mind. This is
-the best pastoral in the language, not excepting Pope’s or Philips’s. We
-doubt whether Sannazarius’s _Piscatory Eclogues_ are equal to the scenes
-described by Walton on the banks of the River Lea. He gives the feeling
-of the open air. We walk with him along the dusty roadside, or repose on
-the banks of the river under a shady tree, and in watching for the finny
-prey, imbibe what he beautifully calls ‘the patience and simplicity of
-poor, honest fishermen.’ We accompany them to their inn at night, and
-partake of their simple but delicious fare, while Maud, the pretty
-milkmaid, at her mother’s desire, sings the classical ditties of Sir
-Walter Raleigh. Good cheer is not neglected in this work, any more than
-in _John Buncle_, or any other history which sets a proper value on the
-good things of life. The prints in the _Complete Angler_ give an
-additional reality and interest to the scenes it describes. While
-Tottenham Cross shall stand, and longer, thy work, amiable and happy old
-man, shall last![43]
-
- W. H.
-
-
- NO. 15.] ON THE CAUSES OF METHODISM [OCT. 22, 1815.
-
-The first Methodist on record was David. He was the first eminent person
-we read of, who made a regular compromise between religion and morality,
-between faith and good works. After any trifling peccadillo in point of
-conduct, as a murder, adultery, perjury, or the like, he ascended with
-his harp into some high tower of his palace; and having chaunted, in a
-solemn strain of poetical inspiration, the praises of piety and virtue,
-made his peace with heaven and his own conscience. This extraordinary
-genius, in the midst of his personal errors, retained the same lofty
-abstract enthusiasm for the favourite objects of his contemplation; the
-character of the poet and the prophet remained unimpaired by the vices
-of the man—
-
- ‘Pure in the last recesses of the mind’;
-
-and the best test of the soundness of his principles and the elevation
-of his sentiments, is, that they were proof against his practice. The
-Gnostics afterwards maintained, that it was no matter what a man’s
-actions were, so that his understanding was not debauched by them—so
-that his opinions continued uncontaminated, and _his heart_, as the
-phrase is, _right towards God_. Strictly speaking, this sect (whatever
-name it might go by) is as old as human nature itself; for it has
-existed ever since there was a contradiction between the passions and
-the understanding—between what we are, and what we desire to be. The
-principle of Methodism is nearly allied to hypocrisy, and almost
-unavoidably slides into it: yet it is not the same thing; for we can
-hardly call any one a hypocrite, however much at variance his
-professions and his actions, who really wishes to be what he would be
-thought.
-
-The Jewish bard, whom we have placed at the head of this class of
-devotees, was of a sanguine and robust temperament. Whether he chose ‘to
-sinner it or saint it,’ he did both most royally, with a fulness of
-gusto, and carried off his penances and his _faux-pas_ in a style of
-oriental grandeur. This is by no means the character of his followers
-among ourselves, who are a most pitiful set. They may rather be
-considered as a collection of religious invalids; as the refuse of all
-that is weak and unsound in body and mind. To speak of them as they
-deserve, they are not well in the flesh, and therefore they take refuge
-in the spirit; they are not comfortable here, and they seek for the life
-to come; they are deficient in steadiness of moral principle, and they
-trust to grace to make up the deficiency; they are dull and gross in
-apprehension, and therefore they are glad to substitute faith for
-reason, and to plunge in the dark, under the supposed sanction of
-superior wisdom, into every species of mystery and jargon. This is the
-history of Methodism, which may be defined to be religion with its
-slobbering-bib and go-cart. It is a bastard kind of Popery, stripped of
-its painted pomp and outward ornaments, and reduced to a state of
-pauperism. ‘The whole need not a physician.’ Popery owed its success to
-its constant appeal to the senses and to the weaknesses of mankind. The
-Church of England deprives the Methodists of the pride and pomp of the
-Romish Church; but it has left open to them the appeal to the indolence,
-the ignorance, and the vices of the people; and the secret of the
-success of the Catholic faith and evangelical preaching is the same—both
-are a religion by proxy. What the one did by auricular confession,
-absolution, penance, pictures, and crucifixes, the other does, even more
-compendiously, by grace, election, faith without works, and words
-without meaning.
-
-In the first place, the same reason makes a man a religious enthusiast
-that makes a man an enthusiast in any other way, an uncomfortable mind
-in an uncomfortable body. Poets, authors, and artists in general, have
-been ridiculed for a pining, puritanical, poverty-struck appearance,
-which has been attributed to their real poverty. But it would perhaps be
-nearer the truth to say, that their being poets, artists, etc. has been
-owing to their original poverty of spirit and weakness of constitution.
-As a general rule, those who are dissatisfied with themselves, will seek
-to go out of themselves into an ideal world. Persons in strong health
-and spirits, who take plenty of air and exercise, who are ‘in favour
-with their stars,’ and have a thorough relish of the good things of this
-life, seldom devote themselves in despair to religion or the Muses.
-Sedentary, nervous, hypochondriacal people, on the contrary, are forced,
-for want of an appetite for the real and substantial, to look out for a
-more airy food and speculative comforts. ‘Conceit in weakest bodies
-strongest works.’ A journeyman sign-painter, whose lungs have imbibed
-too great a quantity of the effluvia of white-lead, will be seized with
-a fantastic passion for the stage; and _Mawworm_, tired of standing
-behind his counter, was eager to mount a tub, mistaking the suppression
-of his animal spirits for the communication of the Holy Ghost![44] If
-you live near a chapel or tabernacle in London, you may almost always
-tell, from physiognomical signs, which of the passengers will turn the
-corner to go there. We were once staying in a remote place in the
-country, where a chapel of this sort had been erected by the force of
-missionary zeal; and one morning, we perceived a long procession of
-people coming from the next town to the consecration of this same
-chapel. Never was there such a set of scarecrows. Melancholy tailors,
-consumptive hair-dressers, squinting cobblers, women with child or in
-the ague, made up the forlorn hope of the pious cavalcade. The pastor of
-this half-starved flock, we confess, came riding after, with a more
-goodly aspect, as if he had ‘with sound of bell been knolled to church,
-and sat at good men’s feasts.’ He had in truth lately married a thriving
-widow, and been pampered with hot suppers to strengthen the flesh and
-the spirit. We have seen several of these ‘round fat oily men of God,
-
- “That shone all glittering with ungodly dew.”’
-
-They grow sleek and corpulent by getting into better pasture, but they
-do not appear healthy. They retain the original sin of their
-constitution, an atrabilious taint in their complexion, and do not put a
-right-down, hearty, honest, good-looking face upon the matter, like the
-regular clergy.
-
-Again, Methodism, by its leading doctrines, has a peculiar charm for all
-those, who have an equal facility in sinning and repenting,—in whom the
-spirit is willing but the flesh is weak,—who have neither fortitude to
-withstand temptation, nor to silence the admonitions of conscience,—who
-like the theory of religion better than the practice, and who are
-willing to indulge in all the raptures of speculative devotion, without
-being tied down to the dull, literal performance of its duties. There is
-a general propensity in the human mind (even in the most vicious) to pay
-virtue a distant homage; and this desire is only checked by the fear of
-condemning ourselves by our own acknowledgments. What an admirable
-expedient then in ‘that burning and shining light,’ Whitefield, and his
-associates, to make this very disposition to admire and extol the
-highest patterns of goodness, a substitute for, instead of an obligation
-to, the practice of virtue, to allow us to be quit for ‘the vice that
-most easily besets us,’ by canting lamentations over the depravity of
-human nature, and loud hosannahs to the Son of David! How comfortably
-this doctrine must sit on all those who are loth to give up old habits
-of vice, or are just tasting the sweets of new ones; on the withered hag
-who looks back on a life of dissipation, or the young devotee who looks
-forward to a life of pleasure; the knavish tradesman retiring from
-business or entering on it; the battered rake; the sneaking politician,
-who trims between his place and his conscience, wriggling between heaven
-and earth, a miserable two-legged creature, with sanctified face and
-fawning gestures; the maudling sentimentalist, the religious prostitute,
-the disinterested poet-laureate, the humane war-contractor, or the
-Society for the Suppression of Vice! This scheme happily turns morality
-into a sinecure, takes all the practical drudgery and trouble off your
-hands, ‘and sweet religion makes a rhapsody of words.’ Its proselytes
-besiege the gates of heaven, like sturdy beggars about the doors of the
-great, lie and bask in the sunshine of divine grace, sigh and groan and
-bawl out for mercy, expose their sores and blotches to excite
-commiseration, and cover the deformities of their nature with a garb of
-borrowed righteousness!
-
-The jargon and nonsense which are so studiously inculcated in the
-system, are another powerful recommendation of it to the vulgar. It does
-not impose any tax upon the understanding. Its essence is to be
-unintelligible. It is _carte blanche_ for ignorance and folly! Those,
-‘numbers without number,’ who are either unable or unwilling to think
-connectedly or rationally on any subject, are at once released from
-every obligation of the kind, by being told that faith and reason are
-opposed to one another, and the greater the impossibility, the greater
-the merit of the faith. A set of phrases which, without conveying any
-distinct idea, excite our wonder, our fear, our curiosity and desires,
-which let loose the imagination of the gaping multitude, and confound
-and baffle common sense, are the common stock-in-trade of the
-conventicle. They never stop for the distinctions of the understanding,
-and have thus got the start of other sects, who are so hemmed in with
-the necessity of giving reasons for their opinions, that they cannot get
-on at all. ‘Vital Christianity’ is no other than an attempt to lower all
-religion to the level of the capacities of the lowest of the people. One
-of their favourite places of worship combines the noise and turbulence
-of a drunken brawl at an ale-house, with the indecencies of a bagnio.
-They strive to gain a vertigo by abandoning their reason, and give
-themselves up to the intoxications of a distempered zeal, that
-
- ‘Dissolves them into ecstasies,
- And brings all heaven before their eyes.’
-
-Religion, without superstition, will not answer the purposes of
-fanaticism, and we may safely say, that almost every sect of
-Christianity is a perversion of its essence, to accommodate it to the
-prejudices of the world. The Methodists have greased the boots of the
-Presbyterians, and they have done well. While the latter are weighing
-their doubts and scruples to the division of a hair, and shivering on
-the narrow brink that divides philosophy from religion, the former
-plunge without remorse into hell-flames, soar on the wings of divine
-love, are carried away with the motions of the spirit, are lost in the
-abyss of unfathomable mysteries,—election, reprobation,
-predestination,—and revel in a sea of boundless nonsense. It is a gulf
-that swallows up every thing. The cold, the calculating, and the dry,
-are not to the taste of the many; religion is an anticipation of the
-preternatural world, and it in general requires preternatural
-excitements to keep it alive. If it takes a definite consistent form, it
-loses its interest: to produce its effect it must come in the shape of
-an apparition. Our quacks treat grown people as the nurses do
-children;—terrify them with what they have no idea of, or take them to a
-puppet-show.
-
- W. H.
-
-
- NO. 16.] ON THE MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM [NOV. 26, 1815.
-
-Bottom the weaver is a character that has not had justice done him. He
-is the most romantic of mechanics. And what a list of companions he
-has—_Quince_ the carpenter, _Snug_ the joiner, _Flute_ the
-bellows-mender, _Snout_ the tinker, _Starveling_ the tailor; and then,
-again, what a group of fairy attendants, _Puck_, _Peaseblossom_,
-_Cobweb_, _Moth_, and _Mustard-seed_! It has been observed that
-Shakspeare’s characters are constructed upon deep physiological
-principles; and there is something in this play which looks very like
-it. _Bottom_ the weaver, who takes the lead of
-
- ‘This crew of patches, rude mechanicals,
- That work for bread upon Athenian stalls,’
-
-follows a sedentary trade, and he is accordingly represented as
-conceited, serious, and fantastical. He is ready to undertake any thing
-and every thing, as if it was as much a matter of course as the motion
-of his loom and shuttle. He is for playing the tyrant, the lover, the
-lady, the lion. ‘He will roar that it shall do any man’s heart good to
-hear him’; and this being objected to as improper, he still has a
-resource in his good opinion of himself, and ‘will roar you an ‘twere
-any nightingale.’ _Snug_ the joiner is the moral man of the piece, who
-proceeds by measurement and discretion in all things. You see him with
-his rule and compasses in his hand. ‘Have you the lion’s part written?
-Pray you, if it be, give it me, for I am slow of study.’ ‘You may do it
-extempore,’ says _Quince_, ‘for it is nothing but roaring.’ _Starveling_
-the tailor keeps the peace, and objects to the lion and the drawn sword:
-‘I believe we must leave the killing out, when all’s done.’
-_Starveling_, however, does not start the objections himself, but
-seconds them when made by others, as if he had not spirit to express his
-fears without encouragement. It is too much to suppose all this
-intentional: but it very luckily falls out so. Nature includes all that
-is implied in the most subtle and analytical distinctions; and the same
-distinctions will be found in Shakspeare. _Bottom_, who is not only
-chief actor, but stage-manager for the occasion, has a device to obviate
-the danger of frightening the ladies: ‘Write me a prologue, and let the
-prologue seem to say, we will do him no harm with our swords, and that
-Pyramus is not killed indeed; and for better assurance, tell them that
-I, Pyramus, am not Pyramus, but Bottom the weaver; this will put them
-out of fear.’ _Bottom_ seems to have understood the subject of dramatic
-illusion at least as well as any modern essayist. If our holiday
-mechanic rules the roast among his fellows, he is no less at home in his
-new character of an ass, ‘with amiable cheeks and fair large ears.’ He
-instinctively acquires a most learned taste, and grows fastidious in the
-choice of dried peas and bottled hay. He is quite familiar with his new
-attendants, and assigns them their parts with all due gravity. ‘Monsieur
-_Cobweb_, good Monsieur, get your weapon in your hand, and kill me a
-red-hipt humble bee on the top of a thistle, and good Monsieur, bring me
-the honey-bag.’ What an exact knowledge is shewn here of natural
-history!
-
-_Puck_ or _Robin Goodfellow_ is the leader of the fairy band. He is the
-_Ariel_ of the _Midsummer Night’s Dream_; and yet as unlike as can be to
-the _Ariel_ in the _Tempest_. No other poet could have made two such
-different characters out of the same fanciful materials and situations.
-_Ariel_ is a minister of retribution, who is touched with a sense of
-pity at the woes he inflicts. _Puck_ is a mad-cap sprite, full of
-wantonness and mischief, who laughs at those whom he misleads: ‘Lord,
-what fools these mortals be!’ _Ariel_ cleaves the air, and executes his
-mission with the zeal of a winged messenger: _Puck_ is borne along on
-his fairy errand, like the light and glittering gossamer before the
-breeze. He is, indeed, a most Epicurean little gentleman, dealing in
-quaint devices, and faring in dainty delights. _Prospero_ and his world
-of spirits are a set of moralists: but with _Oberon_ and his fairies we
-are launched at once into the empire of the butterflies. How beautifully
-is this race of beings contrasted with the men and women actors in the
-scene, by a single epithet which _Titania_ gives to the latter, ‘the
-human mortals’! It is astonishing that Shakspeare should be considered,
-not only by foreigners, but by many of our own critics, as a gloomy and
-heavy writer, who painted nothing but ‘Gorgons and Hydras and Chimeras
-dire.’ His subtlety exceeds that of all other dramatic writers, insomuch
-that a celebrated person of the present day said, that he regarded him
-rather as a metaphysician than a poet. His delicacy and sportive gaiety
-are infinite. In the _Midsummer Night’s Dream_ alone, we should imagine,
-there is more sweetness and beauty of description than in the whole
-range of French poetry put together. What we mean is this, that we will
-produce out of that single play ten passages, to which we do not think
-any ten passages in the works of the French poets can be opposed,
-displaying equal fancy and imagery. Shall we mention the remonstrance of
-_Helena_ to _Hermia_, or _Titania’s_ description of her fairy train, or
-her disputes with _Oberon_ about the Indian boy, or _Puck’s_ account of
-himself and his employments, or the Fairy Queen’s exhortation to the
-elves to pay due attendance upon her favourite _Bottom_,[45] or
-_Hippolyta’s_ description of a chace, or _Theseus’s_ answer? The two
-last are as heroical and spirited, as the others are full of luscious
-tenderness. The reading of this play is like wandering in a grove by
-moonlight: the descriptions breathe a sweetness like odours thrown from
-beds of flowers.
-
-Shakspeare is almost the only poet of whom it may be said, that
-
- ‘Age cannot wither, nor custom stale
- His infinite variety.’
-
-His nice touches of individual character, and marking of its different
-gradations, have been often admired; but the instances have not been
-exhausted, because they are inexhaustible. We will mention two which
-occur to us. One is where _Christopher Sly_ expresses his approbation of
-the play, by saying, ‘’Tis a good piece of work, would ‘twere done,’ as
-if he were thinking of his Saturday night’s job. Again, there cannot
-well be a finer gradation of character than that in Henry IV. between
-_Falstaff_ and _Shallow_, and _Shallow_ and _Silence_. It seems
-difficult to fall lower than the Squire; but this fool, great as he is,
-finds an admirer and humble foil in his cousin _Silence_. Vain of his
-acquaintance with _Sir John_, who makes a butt of him, he exclaims,
-‘Would, cousin _Silence_, that thou had’st seen that which this Knight
-and I have seen!’ ‘Aye, master _Shallow_, we have heard the chimes at
-midnight,’ says _Sir John_. The true spirit of humanity, the thorough
-knowledge of the stuff we are made of, the practical wisdom with the
-seeming fooleries, in the whole of this exquisite scene, and afterwards
-in the dialogue on the death of old _Double_, have no parallel anywhere
-else.
-
-It has been suggested to us, that the _Midsummer Night’s Dream_ would do
-admirably to get up as a Christmas after-piece; and our prompter
-proposes that Mr. Kean should play the part of _Bottom_, as worthy of
-his great talents. He might offer to play the lady like any of our
-actresses that he pleased, the lover or the tyrant like any of our
-actors that he pleased, and the lion like ‘the most fearful wild fowl
-living.’ The carpenter, the tailor, and joiner, would hit the galleries.
-The young ladies in love would interest the side-boxes, and _Robin
-Goodfellow_ and his companions excite a lively fellow-feeling in the
-children from school. There would be two courts, an empire within an
-empire, the Athenian and the Fairy King and Queen, with their
-attendants, and with all their finery. What an opportunity for
-processions, for the sound of trumpets, and glittering of spears! What a
-fluttering of urchins’ painted wings; what a delightful profusion of
-gauze clouds, and airy spirits floating on them! It would be a complete
-English fairy tale.
-
- W. H.
-
-
- NO. 17.] ON THE BEGGAR’S OPERA [JUNE 18, 1815.
-
-We have begun this Essay on a very coarse sheet of damaged foolscap, and
-we find that we are going to write it, whether for the sake of contrast,
-or from having a very fine pen, in a remarkably nice hand. Something of
-a similar process seems to have taken place in Gay’s mind, when he
-composed his _Beggar’s Opera_. He chose a very unpromising ground to
-work upon, and he has prided himself in adorning it with all the graces,
-the precision and brilliancy of style. It is a vulgar error to call this
-a vulgar play. So far from it, that we do not scruple to declare our
-opinion that it is one of the most refined productions in the language.
-The elegance of the composition is in exact proportion to the coarseness
-of the materials: by ‘happy alchemy of mind,’ the author has extracted
-an essence of refinement from the dregs of human life, and turns its
-very dross into gold. The scenes, characters, and incidents are, in
-themselves, of the lowest and most disgusting kind: but, by the
-sentiments and reflections which are put into the mouths of highwaymen,
-turnkeys, their mistresses, wives, or daughters, he has converted this
-motley group into a set of fine gentlemen and ladies, satirists and
-philosophers. He has also effected this transformation without once
-violating probability, or ‘o’erstepping the modesty of nature.’ In fact
-Gay has turned the tables on the critics; and by the assumed licence of
-the mock-heroic style, has enabled himself to _do justice to nature_,
-that is, to give all the force, truth, and locality of real feeling to
-the thoughts and expressions, without being called to the bar of false
-taste and affected delicacy. The extreme beauty and feeling of the song,
-‘Woman is like the fair flower in its lustre,’ is only equalled by its
-characteristic propriety and _naïveté_. It may be said that this is
-taken from Tibullus; but there is nothing about Covent Garden in
-Tibullus. _Polly_ describes her lover going to the gallows with the same
-touching simplicity, and with all the natural fondness of a young girl
-in her circumstances, who sees in his approaching catastrophe nothing
-but the misfortunes and the personal accomplishments of the object of
-her affections. ‘I see him sweeter than the nosegay in his hand: the
-admiring crowd lament that so lovely a youth should come to an untimely
-end:—even butchers weep, and Jack Ketch refuses his fee rather than
-consent to tie the fatal knot.’ The preservation of the character and
-costume is complete. It has been said by a great authority, ‘There is
-some soul of goodness in things evil’: and the _Beggar’s Opera_ is a
-good-natured but instructive comment on this text. The poet has thrown
-all the gaiety and sunshine of the imagination, all the intoxication of
-pleasure, and the vanity of despair, round the short-lived existence of
-his heroes; while _Peachum_ and _Lockitt_ are seen in the back-ground,
-parcelling out their months and weeks between them. The general view
-exhibited of human life, is of the most masterly and abstracted kind.
-The author has, with great felicity, brought out the good qualities and
-interesting emotions almost inseparable from the lowest conditions; and
-with the same penetrating glance has detected the disguises which rank
-and circumstances lend to exalted vice. Every line in this sterling
-comedy sparkles with wit, and is fraught with the keenest sarcasm. The
-very wit, however, takes off from the offensiveness of the satire; and
-we have seen great statesmen, very great statesmen, heartily enjoying
-the joke, laughing most immoderately at the compliments paid to them as
-not much worse than pickpockets and cut-throats in a different line of
-life, and pleased, as it were, to see themselves humanised by some sort
-of fellowship with their kind. Indeed, it may be said that the moral of
-the piece is to show the _vulgarity_ of vice; and that the same
-violations of integrity and decorum, the same habitual sophistry in
-palliating their want of principle, are common to the great and
-powerful, with the lowest and most contemptible of the species. What can
-be more convincing than the arguments used by these would-be
-politicians, to shew that in hypocrisy, selfishness, and treachery, they
-do not come up to many of their betters? The exclamation of _Mrs.
-Peachum_, when her daughter marries _Macheath_, ‘Hussey, hussey, you
-will be as ill used, and as much neglected, as if you had married a
-lord,’ is worth all Miss Hannah More’s laboured invectives on the laxity
-of the manners of high life![46]
-
- W. H.
-
-
- NO. 18.] ON PATRIOTISM.—A FRAGMENT [JAN. 5, 1814.
-
-Patriotism, in modern times, and in great states, is and must be the
-creature of reason and reflection, rather than the offspring of physical
-or local attachment. Our country is a complex, abstract existence,
-recognised only by the understanding. It is an immense riddle,
-containing numberless modifications of reason and prejudice, of thought
-and passion. Patriotism is not, in a strict or exclusive sense, a
-natural or personal affection, but a law of our rational and moral
-nature, strengthened and determined by particular circumstances and
-associations, but not born of them, nor wholly nourished by them. It is
-not possible that we should have an individual attachment to sixteen
-millions of men, any more than to sixty millions. We cannot be
-_habitually_ attached to places we never saw, and people we never heard
-of. Is not the name of Englishman a general term, as well as that of
-man? How many varieties does it not combine within it? Are the opposite
-extremities of the globe our native place, because they are a part of
-that geographical and political denomination, our country? Does natural
-affection expand in circles of latitude and longitude? What personal or
-instinctive sympathy has the English peasant with the African
-slave-driver, or East Indian Nabob? Some of our wretched bunglers in
-metaphysics would fain persuade us to discard all general humanity, and
-all sense of abstract justice, as a violation of natural affection, and
-yet do not see that the love of our country itself is in the list of our
-general affections. The common notions of patriotism are transmitted
-down to us from the savage tribes, where the fate and condition of all
-was the same, or from the states of Greece and Rome, where the country
-of the citizen was the town in which he was born. Where this is no
-longer the case,—where our country is no longer contained within the
-narrow circle of the same walls,—where we can no longer behold its
-glimmering horizon from the top of our native mountains—beyond these
-limits, it is not a natural but an artificial idea, and our love of it
-either a deliberate dictate of reason, or a cant term. It was said by an
-acute observer, and eloquent writer (Rousseau) that the love of mankind
-was nothing but the love of justice: the same might be said, with
-considerable truth, of the love of our country. It is little more than
-another name for the love of liberty, of independence, of peace, and
-social happiness. We do not say that other indirect and collateral
-circumstances do not go to the superstructure of this sentiment (as
-language,[47] literature, manners, national customs), but this is the
-broad and firm basis.
-
-
- NO. 19.] ON BEAUTY [FEB. 4, 1816.
-
-It is about sixty years ago that Sir Joshua Reynolds, in three papers
-which he wrote in the _Idler_, advanced the notion, which has prevailed
-very much ever since, that Beauty was entirely dependent on custom, or
-on the conformity of objects to a given standard. Now, we could never
-persuade ourselves that custom, or the association of ideas, though a
-very powerful, was the only principle of the preference which the mind
-gives to certain objects over others. Novelty is surely one source of
-pleasure; otherwise we cannot account for the well-known epigram,
-beginning—
-
- ‘Two happy things in marriage are allowed,’ etc.
-
-Nor can we help thinking, that, besides custom, or the conformity of
-certain objects to others of the same general class, there is also a
-certain conformity of objects to themselves, a symmetry of parts, a
-principle of proportion, gradation, harmony (call it what you will),
-which makes certain things naturally pleasing or beautiful, and the want
-of it the contrary.
-
-We will not pretend to define what Beauty is, after so many learned
-authors have failed; but we shall attempt to give some examples of what
-constitutes it, to shew that it is in some way inherent in the object,
-and that if custom is a second nature, there is another nature which
-ranks before it. Indeed, the idea that all pleasure and pain depend on
-the association of ideas is manifestly absurd: there must be something
-in itself pleasurable or painful, before it could become possible for
-the feelings of pleasure or pain to be transferred by association from
-one object to another.
-
-Regular features are generally accounted handsome; but regular features
-are those, the outlines of which answer most nearly to each other, or
-undergo the fewest abrupt changes. We shall attempt to explain this idea
-by a reference to the Greek and African face; the first of which is
-beautiful, because it is made up of lines corresponding with or melting
-into each other: the last is not so, because it is made up almost
-entirely of contradictory lines and sharp angular projections.
-
-The general principle of the difference between the two heads is this:
-the forehead of the Greek is square and upright, and, as it were,
-overhangs the rest of the face, except the nose, which is a continuation
-of it almost in an even line. In the Negro or African, the tip of the
-nose is the most projecting part of the face; and from that point the
-features retreat back, both upwards towards the forehead, and downwards
-to the chin. This last form is an approximation to the shape of the head
-of the animal, as the former bears the strongest stamp of humanity.
-
-The Grecian nose is regular, the African irregular. In other words, the
-Grecian nose seen in profile forms nearly a straight line with the
-forehead, and falls into the upper lip by two curves, which balance one
-another: seen in front, the two sides are nearly parallel to each other,
-and the nostrils and lower part form regular curves, answering to one
-another, and to the contours of the mouth. On the contrary, the African
-pug-nose is more ‘like an ace of clubs.’ Whichever way you look at it,
-it presents the appearance of a triangle. It is narrow, and drawn to a
-point at top, broad and flat at bottom. The point is peaked, and recedes
-abruptly to the level of the forehead or the mouth, and the nostrils are
-as if they were drawn up with hooks towards each other. All the lines
-cross each other at sharp angles. The forehead of the Greeks is flat and
-square, till it is rounded at the temples; the African forehead, like
-the ape’s, falls back towards the top, and spreads out at the sides, so
-as to form an angle with the cheek-bones. The eyebrows of the Greeks are
-either straight, so as to sustain the lower part of the tablet of the
-forehead, or gently arched, so as to form the outer circle of the curves
-of the eyelids. The form of the eyes gives all the appearance of orbs,
-full, swelling, and involved within each other; the African eyes are
-flat, narrow at the corners, in the shape of a tortoise, and the
-eyebrows fly off slantwise to the sides of the forehead. The idea of the
-superiority of the Greek face in this respect is admirably expressed in
-Spenser’s description of Belphœbe:
-
- ‘Her ivory forehead, full of bounty brave,
- Like a broad table did itself dispread,
- For love therein his triumphs to engrave,
- And write the battles of his great Godhead.
-
- . . . . .
-
- Upon her eyelids many Graces sat
- Under the shadow of her even brows.’
-
-The head of the girl in the _Transfiguration_ (which Raphael took from
-the _Niobe_) has the same correspondence and exquisite involution of the
-outline of the forehead, the eyebrows, and the eyes (circle within
-circle) which we here speak of. Every part of that delightful head is
-blended together, and every sharp projection moulded and softened down,
-with the feeling of a sculptor, or as if nothing should be left to
-offend the _touch_ as well as eye. Again, the Greek mouth is small, and
-little wider than the lower part of the nose: the lips form waving
-lines, nearly answering to each other; the African mouth is twice as
-wide as the nose, projects in front, and falls back towards the ears—is
-sharp and triangular, and consists of one protruding and one distended
-lip. The chin of the Greek face is round and indented, curled in,
-forming a fine oval with the outline of the cheeks, which resemble the
-two halves of a plane parallel with the forehead, and rounded off like
-it. The Negro chin falls inwards like a dew-lap, is nearly bisected in
-the middle, flat at bottom, and joined abruptly to the rest of the face,
-the whole contour of which is made up of jagged cross-grained lines. The
-African physiognomy appears, indeed, splitting in pieces, starting out
-in every oblique direction, and marked by the most sudden and violent
-changes throughout: the whole of the Grecian face blends with itself in
-a state of the utmost harmony and repose.[48] There is a harmony of
-expression as well as a symmetry of form. We sometimes see a face
-melting into beauty by the force of sentiment—an eye that, in its liquid
-mazes, for ever expanding and for ever retiring within itself, draws the
-soul after it, and tempts the rash beholder to his fate. This is,
-perhaps, what Werter meant, when he says of Charlotte, ‘Her full dark
-eyes are ever before me, like a sea, like a precipice.’ The historical
-in expression is the consistent and harmonious,—whatever in thought or
-feeling communicates the same movement, whether voluptuous or
-impassioned, to all the parts of the face, the mouth, the eyes, the
-forehead, and shews that they are all actuated by the same spirit. For
-this reason it has been observed, that all intellectual and impassioned
-faces are historical,—the heads of philosophers, poets, lovers, and
-madmen.
-
-Motion is beautiful as it implies either continuity or gradual change.
-The motion of a hawk is beautiful, either returning in endless circles
-with suspended wings, or darting right forward in one level line upon
-its prey. We have, when boys, often watched the glittering down of the
-thistle, at first scarcely rising above the ground, and then, mingling
-with the gale, borne into the upper sky with varying fantastic motion.
-How delightful, how beautiful! All motion is beautiful that is not
-contradictory to itself,—that is free from sudden jerks and shocks,—that
-is either sustained by the same impulse, or gradually reconciles
-different impulses together. Swans resting on the calm bosom of a lake,
-in which their image is reflected, or moved up and down with the heaving
-of the waves, though by this the double image is disturbed, are equally
-beautiful. Homer describes Mercury as flinging himself from the top of
-Olympus, and skimming the surface of the ocean. This is lost in Pope’s
-translation, who suspends him on the incumbent air. The beauty of the
-original image consists in the idea which it conveys of smooth,
-uninterrupted speed, of the evasion of every let or obstacle to the
-progress of the God.[49] Awkwardness is occasioned by a difficulty in
-moving, or by disjointed movements, that distract the attention and
-defeat each other. Grace is the absence of every thing that indicates
-pain or difficulty, or hesitation or incongruity. The only graceful
-dancer we ever saw was Deshayes, the Frenchman. He came on bounding like
-a stag. It was not necessary to have seen good dancing before to know
-that this was really fine. Whoever has seen the sea in motion, the
-branches of a tree waving in the air, would instantly perceive the
-resemblance. Flexibility and grace are to be found in nature as well as
-at the opera. Mr. Burke, in his Essay on the Sublime and Beautiful, has
-very admirably described the bosom of a beautiful woman, almost entirely
-with reference to the ideas of motion. Those outlines are beautiful
-which describe pleasant motions. A fine use is made of this principle by
-one of the apocryphal writers, in describing the form of the rainbow.
-‘He hath set his bow in the heavens, and his hands have bended it.’
-Harmony in colour has not been denied to be a natural property of
-objects, consisting in the gradations of intermediate colours. The
-principle appears to be here the same as in some of the former
-instances. The effect of colour in Titian’s Bath of Diana, at the
-Marquis of Stafford’s, is perhaps the finest in the world, made up of
-the richest contrasts, blended together by the most masterly gradations.
-Harmony of sound depends apparently on the same principle as harmony of
-colour. Rhyme depends on the pleasure derived from a recurrence of
-similar sounds, as symmetry of features does on the correspondence of
-the different outlines. The prose style of Dr. Johnson originated in the
-same principle. The secret consisted in rhyming on the sense, and
-balancing one half of the sentence uniformly and systematically against
-the other. The Hebrew poetry was constructed in the same manner.
-
- W.
-
-
- NO. 20.] ON IMITATION [FEB. 18, 1816.
-
-Objects in themselves disagreeable or indifferent, often please in the
-imitation. A brick-floor, a pewter-plate, an ugly cur barking, a Dutch
-boor smoking or playing at skittles, the inside of a shambles, a
-fishmonger’s or a greengrocer’s stall, have been made very interesting
-as pictures by the fidelity, skill, and spirit, with which they have
-been copied. One source of the pleasure thus received is undoubtedly the
-surprise or feeling of admiration, occasioned by the unexpected
-coincidence between the imitation and the object. The deception,
-however, not only pleases at first sight, or from mere novelty; but it
-continues to please upon farther acquaintance, and in proportion to the
-insight we acquire into the distinctions of nature and of art. By far
-the most numerous class of connoisseurs are the admirers of pictures of
-_still life_, which have nothing but the elaborateness of the execution
-to recommend them. One chief reason, it should seem then, why imitation
-pleases, is, because, by exciting curiosity, and inviting a comparison
-between the object and the representation, it opens a new field of
-inquiry, and leads the attention to a variety of details and
-distinctions not perceived before. This latter source of the pleasure
-derived from imitation has never been properly insisted on.
-
-The anatomist is delighted with a coloured plate, conveying the exact
-appearance of the progress of certain diseases, or of the internal parts
-and dissections of the human body. We have known a Jennerian Professor
-as much enraptured with a delineation of the different stages of
-vaccination, as a florist with a bed of tulips, or an auctioneer with a
-collection of Indian shells. But in this case, we find that not only the
-imitation pleases,—the objects themselves give as much pleasure to the
-professional inquirer, as they would pain to the uninitiated. The
-learned amateur is struck with the beauty of the coats of the stomach
-laid bare, or contemplates with eager curiosity the transverse section
-of the brain, divided on the new Spurzheim principles. It is here, then,
-the number of the parts, their distinctions, connections, structure,
-uses; in short, an entire new set of ideas, which occupies the mind of
-the student, and overcomes the sense of pain and repugnance, which is
-the only feeling that the sight of a dead and mangled body presents to
-ordinary men. It is the same in art as in science. The painter of still
-life, as it is called, takes the same pleasure in the object as the
-spectator does in the imitation; because by habit he is led to perceive
-all those distinctions in nature, to which other persons never pay any
-attention till they are pointed out to them in the picture. The vulgar
-only see nature as it is reflected to them from art; the painter sees
-the picture in nature, before he transfers it to the canvass. He
-refines, he analyses, he remarks fifty things, which escape common eyes;
-and this affords a distinct source of reflection and amusement to him,
-independently of the beauty or grandeur of the objects themselves, or of
-their connection with other impressions besides those of sight. The
-charm of the Fine Arts, then, does not consist in any thing peculiar to
-imitation, even where only imitation is concerned, since _there_, where
-art exists in the highest perfection, namely, in the mind of the artist,
-the object excites the same or greater pleasure, before the imitation
-exists. Imitation renders an object, displeasing in itself, a source of
-pleasure, not by repetition of the same idea, but by suggesting new
-ideas, by detecting new properties, and endless shades of difference,
-just as a close and continued contemplation of the object itself would
-do. Art shows us nature, divested of the medium of our prejudices. It
-divides and decompounds objects into a thousand curious parts, which may
-be full of variety, beauty, and delicacy in themselves, though the
-object to which they belong may be disagreeable in its general
-appearance, or by association with other ideas. A painted marigold is
-inferior to a painted rose only in form and colour: it loses nothing in
-point of smell. Yellow hair is perfectly beautiful in a picture. To a
-person lying with his face close to the ground in a summer’s day, the
-blades of spear-grass will appear like tall forest trees, shooting up
-into the sky; as an insect seen through a microscope is magnified into
-an elephant. Art is the microscope of the mind, which sharpens the wit
-as the other does the sight; and converts every object into a little
-universe in itself.[50] Art may be said to draw aside the veil from
-nature. To those who are perfectly unskilled in the practice, unimbued
-with the principles of art, most objects present only a confused mass.
-The pursuit of art is liable to be carried to a contrary excess, as
-where it produces a rage for the _picturesque_. You cannot go a step
-with a person of this class, but he stops you to point out some choice
-bit of landscape, or fancied improvement, and teazes you almost to death
-with the frequency and insignificance of his discoveries!
-
-It is a common opinion, (which may be worth noticing here), that the
-study of physiognomy has a tendency to make people satirical, and the
-knowledge of art to make them fastidious in their taste. Knowledge may,
-indeed, afford a handle to ill-nature; but it takes away the principal
-temptation to its exercise, by supplying the mind with better resources
-against _ennui_. Idiots are always mischievous; and the most superficial
-persons are the most disposed to find fault, because they understand the
-fewest things. The English are more apt than any other nation to treat
-foreigners with contempt, because they seldom see anything but their own
-dress and manners; and it is only in petty provincial towns that you
-meet with persons who pride themselves on being satirical. In every
-country place in England there are one or two persons of this
-description who keep the whole neighbourhood in terror. It is not to be
-denied that the study of the _ideal_ in art, if separated from the study
-of nature, may have the effect above stated, of producing
-dissatisfaction and contempt for everything but itself, as all
-affectation must; but to the genuine artist, truth, nature, beauty, are
-almost different names for the same thing.
-
-Imitation interests, then, by exciting a more intense perception of
-truth, and calling out the powers of observation and comparison:
-wherever this effect takes place the interest follows of course, with or
-without the imitation, whether the object is real or artificial. The
-gardener delights in the streaks of a tulip, or ‘pansy freak’d with
-jet’; the mineralogist in the varieties of certain strata, because he
-understands them. Knowledge is pleasure as well as power. A work of art
-has in this respect no advantage over a work of nature, except inasmuch
-as it furnishes an additional stimulus to curiosity. Again, natural
-objects please in proportion as they are uncommon, by fixing the
-attention more steadily on their beauties or differences. The same
-principle of the effect of novelty in exciting the attention, may
-account, perhaps, for the extraordinary discoveries and lies told by
-travellers, who, opening their eyes for the first time in foreign parts,
-are startled at every object they meet.
-
-Why the excitement of intellectual activity pleases, is not here the
-question; but that it does so, is a general and acknowledged law of the
-human mind. We grow attached to the mathematics only from finding out
-their truth; and their utility chiefly consists (at present) in the
-contemplative pleasure they afford to the student. Lines, points,
-angles, squares, and circles are not interesting in themselves; they
-become so by the power of mind exerted in comprehending their properties
-and relations. People dispute for ever about Hogarth. The question has
-not in one respect been fairly stated. The merit of his pictures does
-not so much depend on the nature of the subject, as on the knowledge
-displayed of it, on the number of ideas they excite, on the fund of
-thought and observation contained in them. They are to be looked on as
-works of science; they gratify our love of truth; they fill up the void
-of the mind: they are a series of plates of natural history, and also of
-that most interesting part of natural history, the history of man. The
-superiority of high art over the common or mechanical consists in
-combining truth of imitation with beauty and grandeur of subject. The
-historical painter is superior to the flower-painter, because he
-combines or ought to combine human interests and passions with the same
-power of imitating external nature; or, indeed, with greater, for the
-greatest difficulty of imitation is the power of imitating expression.
-The difficulty of copying increases with our knowledge of the object;
-and that again with the interest we take in it. The same argument might
-be applied to shew that the poet and painter of imagination are superior
-to the mere philosopher or man of science, because they exercise the
-powers of reason and intellect combined with nature and passion. They
-treat of the highest categories of the human soul, pleasure and pain.
-
-From the foregoing train of reasoning, we may easily account for the too
-great tendency of art to run into pedantry and affectation. There is ‘a
-pleasure in art which none but artists feel.’ They see beauty where
-others see nothing of the sort, in wrinkles, deformity, and old age.
-They see it in Titian’s Schoolmaster as well as in Raphael’s Galatea; in
-the dark shadows of Rembrandt as well as in the splendid colours of
-Rubens; in an angel’s or in a butterfly’s wings. They see with different
-eyes from the multitude. But true genius, though it has new sources of
-pleasure opened to it, does not lose its sympathy with humanity. It
-combines truth of imitation with effect, the parts with the whole, the
-means with the end. The mechanic artist sees only that which nobody else
-sees, and is conversant only with the technical language and
-difficulties of his art. A painter, if shewn a picture, will generally
-dwell upon the academic skill displayed in it, and the knowledge of the
-received rules of composition. A musician, if asked to play a tune, will
-select that which is the most difficult and the least intelligible. The
-poet will be struck with the harmony of versification, or the
-elaborateness of the arrangement in a composition. The conceits in
-Shakspeare were his greatest delight; and improving upon this perverse
-method of judging, the German writers, Goethe and Schiller, look upon
-Werter and The Robbers as the worst of all their works, because they are
-the most popular. Some artists among ourselves have carried the same
-principle to a singular excess.[51] If professors themselves are liable
-to this kind of pedantry, connoisseurs and dilettanti, who have less
-sensibility and more affectation, are almost wholly swayed by it. They
-see nothing in a picture but the execution. They are proud of their
-knowledge in proportion as it is a secret. The worst judges of pictures
-in the United Kingdom are, first, picture-dealers; next, perhaps, the
-Directors of the British Institution; and after them, in all
-probability, the Members of the Royal Academy.
-
- T. T.
-
-
- NO. 21.] ON _GUSTO_ [MAY 26, 1816.
-
-Gusto in art is power or passion defining any object. It is not so
-difficult to explain this term in what relates to expression (of which
-it may be said to be the highest degree) as in what relates to things
-without expression, to the natural appearances of objects, as mere
-colour or form. In one sense, however, there is hardly any object
-entirely devoid of expression, without some character of power belonging
-to it, some precise association with pleasure or pain: and it is in
-giving this truth of character from the truth of feeling, whether in the
-highest or the lowest degree, but always in the highest degree of which
-the subject is capable, that gusto consists.
-
-There is a gusto in the colouring of Titian. Not only do his heads seem
-to think—his bodies seem to feel. This is what the Italians mean by the
-_morbidezza_ of his flesh-colour. It seems sensitive and alive all over;
-not merely to have the look and texture of flesh, but the feeling in
-itself. For example, the limbs of his female figures have a luxurious
-softness and delicacy, which appears conscious of the pleasure of the
-beholder. As the objects themselves in nature would produce an
-impression on the sense, distinct from every other object, and having
-something divine in it, which the heart owns and the imagination
-consecrates, the objects in the picture preserve the same impression,
-absolute, unimpaired, stamped with all the truth of passion, the pride
-of the eye, and the charm of beauty. Rubens makes his flesh-colour like
-flowers; Albano’s is like ivory; Titian’s is like flesh, and like
-nothing else. It is as different from that of other painters, as the
-skin is from a piece of white or red drapery thrown over it. The blood
-circulates here and there, the blue veins just appear, the rest is
-distinguished throughout only by that sort of tingling sensation to the
-eye, which the body feels within itself. This is gusto. Vandyke’s
-flesh-colour, though it has great truth and purity, wants gusto. It has
-not the internal character, the living principle in it. It is a smooth
-surface, not a warm, moving mass. It is painted without passion, with
-indifference. The hand only has been concerned. The impression slides
-off from the eye, and does not, like the tones of Titian’s pencil, leave
-a sting behind it in the mind of the spectator. The eye does not acquire
-a taste or appetite for what it sees. In a word, gusto in painting is
-where the impression made on one sense excites by affinity those of
-another.
-
-Michael Angelo’s forms are full of gusto. They everywhere obtrude the
-sense of power upon the eye. His limbs convey an idea of muscular
-strength, of moral grandeur, and even of intellectual dignity: they are
-firm, commanding, broad, and massy, capable of executing with ease the
-determined purposes of the will. His faces have no other expression than
-his figures, conscious power and capacity. They appear only to think
-what they shall do, and to know that they can do it. This is what is
-meant by saying that his style is hard and masculine. It is the reverse
-of Correggio’s, which is effeminate. That is, the gusto of Michael
-Angelo consists in expressing energy of will without proportionable
-sensibility, Correggio’s in expressing exquisite sensibility without
-energy of will. In Correggio’s faces as well as figures we see neither
-bones nor muscles, but then what a soul is there, full of sweetness and
-of grace—pure, playful, soft, angelical! There is sentiment enough in a
-hand painted by Correggio to set up a school of history painters.
-Whenever we look at the hands of Correggio’s women or of Raphael’s, we
-always wish to touch them.
-
-Again, Titian’s landscapes have a prodigious gusto, both in the
-colouring and forms. We shall never forget one that we saw many years
-ago in the Orleans Gallery of Acteon hunting. It had a brown, mellow,
-autumnal look. The sky was of the colour of stone. The winds seemed to
-sing through the rustling branches of the trees, and already you might
-hear the twanging of bows resound through the tangled mazes of the wood.
-Mr. West, we understand, has this landscape. He will know if this
-description of it is just. The landscape back-ground of the St. Peter
-Martyr is another well known instance of the power of this great painter
-to give a romantic interest and an appropriate character to the objects
-of his pencil, where every circumstance adds to the effect of the
-scene,—the bold trunks of the tall forest trees, the trailing ground
-plants, with that tall convent spire rising in the distance, amidst the
-blue sapphire mountains and the golden sky.
-
-Rubens has a great deal of gusto in his Fauns and Satyrs, and in all
-that expresses motion, but in nothing else. Rembrandt has it in
-everything; everything in his pictures has a tangible character. If he
-puts a diamond in the ear of a burgomaster’s wife, it is of the first
-water; and his furs and stuffs are proof against a Russian winter.
-Raphael’s gusto was only in expression; he had no idea of the character
-of anything but the human form. The dryness and poverty of his style in
-other respects is a phenomenon in the art. His trees are like sprigs of
-grass stuck in a book of botanical specimens. Was it that Raphael never
-had time to go beyond the walls of Rome? That he was always in the
-streets, at church, or in the bath? He was not one of the Society of
-Arcadians.[52]
-
-Claude’s landscapes, perfect as they are, want gusto. This is not easy
-to explain. They are perfect abstractions of the visible images of
-things; they speak the visible language of nature truly. They resemble a
-mirror or a microscope. To the eye only they are more perfect than any
-other landscapes that ever were or will be painted; they give more of
-nature, as cognisable by one sense alone; but they lay an equal stress
-on all visible impressions. They do not interpret one sense by another;
-they do not distinguish the character of different objects as we are
-taught, and can only be taught, to distinguish them by their effect on
-the different senses. That is, his eye wanted imagination: it did not
-strongly sympathise with his other faculties. He saw the atmosphere, but
-he did not feel it. He painted the trunk of a tree or a rock in the
-foreground as smooth—with as complete an abstraction of the gross,
-tangible impression, as any other part of the picture. His trees are
-perfectly beautiful, but quite immovable; they have a look of
-enchantment. In short, his landscapes are unequalled imitations of
-nature, released from its subjection to the elements, as if all objects
-were become a delightful fairy vision, and the eye had rarefied and
-refined away the other senses.
-
-The gusto in the Greek statues is of a very singular kind. The sense of
-perfect form nearly occupies the whole mind, and hardly suffers it to
-dwell on any other feeling. It seems enough for them _to be_, without
-acting or suffering. Their forms are ideal, spiritual. Their beauty is
-power. By their beauty they are raised above the frailties of pain or
-passion; by their beauty they are deified.
-
-The infinite quantity of dramatic invention in Shakspeare takes from his
-gusto. The power he delights to show is not intense, but discursive. He
-never insists on anything as much as he might, except a quibble. Milton
-has great gusto. He repeats his blows twice; grapples with and exhausts
-his subject. His imagination has a double relish of its objects, an
-inveterate attachment to the things he describes, and to the words
-describing them.
-
- ——‘Or where Chineses drive
- With sails and wind their _cany_ waggons _light_.’
-
- . . . . .
-
- ‘Wild above rule or art, _enormous_ bliss.’
-
-There is a gusto in Pope’s compliments, in Dryden’s satires, and Prior’s
-tales; and among prose writers Boccacio and Rabelais had the most of it.
-We will only mention one other work which appears to us to be full of
-gusto, and that is the _Beggar’s Opera_. If it is not, we are altogether
-mistaken in our notions on this delicate subject.
-
- W. H.
-
-
- NO. 22.] ON PEDANTRY [MARCH 3, 1816.
-
-The power of attaching an interest to the most trifling or painful
-pursuits, in which our whole attention and faculties are engaged, is one
-of the greatest happinesses of our nature. The common soldier mounts the
-breach with joy; the miser deliberately starves himself to death; the
-mathematician sets about extracting the cube-root with a feeling of
-enthusiasm; and the lawyer sheds tears of admiration over Coke upon
-Littleton. It is the same through human life. He who is not in some
-measure a pedant, though he may be a wise, cannot be a very happy man.
-
-The chief charm of reading the old novels is from the picture they give
-of the egotism of the characters, the importance of each individual to
-himself, and his fancied superiority over every one else. We like, for
-instance, the pedantry of Parson Adams, who thought a schoolmaster the
-greatest character in the world, and that he was the greatest
-schoolmaster in it. We do not see any equivalent for the satisfaction
-which this conviction must have afforded him in the most nicely
-graduated scale of talents and accomplishments to which he was an utter
-stranger. When the old-fashioned Scotch pedagogue turns Roderick Random
-round and round, and surveys him from head to foot with such infinite
-surprise and laughter, at the same time breaking out himself into
-gestures and exclamations still more uncouth and ridiculous, who would
-wish to have deprived him of this burst of extravagant self-complacency?
-When our follies afford equal delight to ourselves and those about us,
-what is there to be desired more? We cannot discover the vast advantage
-of ‘seeing ourselves as others see us.’ It is better to have a contempt
-for any one than for ourselves!
-
-One of the most constant butts of ridicule, both in the old comedies and
-novels, is the professional jargon of the medical tribe. Yet it cannot
-be denied that this jargon, however affected it may seem, is the natural
-language of apothecaries and physicians, the mother-tongue of pharmacy!
-It is that by which their knowledge first comes to them, that with which
-they have the most obstinate associations, that in which they can
-express themselves the most readily and with the best effect upon their
-hearers; and though there may be some assumption of superiority in all
-this, yet it is only by an effort of circumlocution that they could
-condescend to explain themselves in ordinary language. Besides, there is
-a delicacy at bottom; as it is the only language in which a nauseous
-medicine can be decorously administered, or a limb taken off with the
-proper degree of secrecy. If the most blundering coxcombs affect this
-language most, what does it signify, while they retain the same
-dignified notions of themselves and their art, and are equally happy in
-their knowledge or their ignorance? The ignorant and pretending
-physician is a capital character in Moliere: and, indeed, throughout his
-whole plays the great source of the comic interest is in the fantastic
-exaggeration of blind self-love, in letting loose the habitual
-peculiarities of each individual from all restraint of conscious
-observation or self-knowledge, in giving way to that specific levity of
-impulse which mounts at once to the height of absurdity, in spite of the
-obstacles that surround it, as a fluid in a barometer rises according to
-the pressure of the external air! His characters are almost always
-pedantic, and yet the most unconscious of all others. Take, for example,
-those two worthy gentlemen, Monsieur Jourdain and Monsieur
-Pourceaugnac.[53]
-
-Learning and pedantry were formerly synonymous; and it was well when
-they were so. Can there be a higher satisfaction than for a man to
-understand Greek, and to believe that there is nothing else worth
-understanding? Learning is the knowledge of that which is not generally
-known. What an ease and a dignity in pretensions, founded on the
-ignorance of others! What a pleasure in wondering, what a pride in being
-wondered at! In the library of the family where we were brought up,
-stood the _Fratres Poloni_; and we can never forget or describe the
-feeling with which not only their appearance, but the names of the
-authors on the outside inspired us. Pripscovius, we remember, was one of
-the easiest to pronounce. The gravity of the contents seemed in
-proportion to the weight of the volumes; the importance of the subjects
-increased with our ignorance of them. The trivialness of the remarks, if
-ever we looked into them,—the repetitions, the monotony, only gave a
-greater solemnity to the whole, as the slowness and minuteness of the
-evidence adds to the impressiveness of a judicial proceeding. We knew
-that the authors had devoted their whole lives to the production of
-these works, carefully abstaining from the introduction of any thing
-amusing or lively or interesting. In ten folio volumes there was not one
-sally of wit, one striking reflection. What, then, must have been their
-sense of the importance of the subject, the profound stores of knowledge
-which they had to communicate! ‘From all this world’s encumbrance they
-did themselves assoil.’ Such was the notion we then had of this learned
-lumber; yet we would rather have this feeling again for one half-hour
-than be possessed of all the acuteness of Bayle or the wit of Voltaire!
-
-It may be considered as a sign of the decay of piety and learning in
-modern times, that our divines no longer introduce texts of the original
-Scriptures into their sermons. The very sound of the original Greek or
-Hebrew would impress the hearer with a more lively faith in the sacred
-writers than any translation, however literal or correct. It may be even
-doubted whether the translation of the Scriptures into the vulgar tongue
-was any advantage to the people. The mystery in which particular points
-of faith were left involved, gave an awe and sacredness to religious
-opinions: the general purport of the truths and promises of revelation
-was made known by other means; and nothing beyond this general and
-implicit conviction can be obtained, where all is undefined and
-infinite.
-
-Again, it may be questioned whether, in matters of mere human reasoning,
-much has been gained by the disuse of the learned languages. Sir Isaac
-Newton wrote in Latin; and it is perhaps one of Bacon’s fopperies that
-he translated his works into English. If certain follies have been
-exposed by being stripped of their formal disguise, others have had a
-greater chance of succeeding, by being presented in a more pleasing and
-popular shape. This has been remarkably the case in France, (the least
-pedantic country in the world), where the women mingle with everything,
-even with metaphysics, and where all philosophy is reduced to a set of
-phrases for the toilette. When books are written in the prevailing
-language of the country, every one becomes a critic who can read. An
-author is no longer tried by his peers. A species of universal suffrage
-is introduced in letters, which is only applicable to politics. The good
-old Latin style of our forefathers, if it concealed the dullness of the
-writer, at least was a barrier against the impertinence, flippancy, and
-ignorance of the reader. However, the immediate transition from the
-pedantic to the popular style in literature was a change that must have
-been very delightful at the time. Our illustrious predecessors, the
-_Tatler_ and _Spectator_, were very happily off in this respect. They
-wore the public favour in its newest gloss, before it had become
-tarnished and common—before familiarity had bred contempt. It was the
-honey-moon of authorship. Their Essays were among the first instances in
-this country of learning sacrificing to the graces, and of a mutual
-understanding and good-humoured equality between the writer and the
-reader. This new style of composition, to use the phraseology of Mr.
-Burke, ‘mitigated authors into companions, and compelled wisdom to
-submit to the soft collar of social esteem.’ The original papers of the
-_Tatler_, printed on a half sheet of common foolscap, were regularly
-served up at breakfast-time with the silver tea-kettle and thin slices
-of bread and butter; and what the ingenious Mr. Bickerstaff wrote
-overnight in his easy chair, he might flatter himself would be read the
-next morning with elegant applause by the fair, the witty, the learned,
-and the great, in all parts of this kingdom, in which civilisation had
-made any considerable advances. The perfection of letters is when the
-highest ambition of the writer is to please his readers, and the
-greatest pride of the reader is to understand his author. The
-satisfaction on both sides ceases when the town becomes a club of
-authors, when each man stands with his manuscript in his hand waiting
-for his turn of applause, and when the claims on our admiration are so
-many, that, like those of common beggars, to prevent imposition they can
-only be answered with general neglect. Our self-love would be quite
-bankrupt, if critics by profession did not come forward as beadles to
-keep off the crowd, and to relieve us from the importunity of these
-innumerable candidates for fame, by pointing out their faults and
-passing over their beauties. In the more auspicious period just alluded
-to an author was regarded by the better sort as a man of genius, and by
-the vulgar, as a kind of prodigy; insomuch that the Spectator was
-obliged to shorten his residence at his friend Sir Roger de Coverley’s,
-from his being taken for a conjuror. Every state of society has its
-advantages and disadvantages. An author is at present in no danger of
-being taken for a conjuror!
-
-
- NO. 23.] THE SAME SUBJECT CONTINUED [MARCH 10, 1816.
-
-Life is the art of being well deceived; and in order that the deception
-may succeed, it must be habitual and uninterrupted. A constant
-examination of the value of our opinions and enjoyments, compared with
-those of others, may lessen our prejudices, but will leave nothing for
-our affections to rest upon. A multiplicity of objects unsettles the
-mind, and destroys not only all enthusiasm, but all sincerity of
-attachment, all constancy of pursuit; as persons accustomed to an
-itinerant mode of life never feel themselves at home in any place. It is
-by means of habit that our intellectual employments mix like our food
-with the circulation of the blood, and go on like any other part of the
-animal functions. To take away the force of habit and prejudice
-entirely, is to strike at the root of our personal existence. The
-book-worm, buried in the depth of his researches, may well say to the
-obtrusive shifting realities of the world, ‘Leave me to my repose!’ We
-have seen an instance of a poetical enthusiast, who would have passed
-his life very comfortably in the contemplation of _his own idea_, if he
-had not been disturbed in his reverie by the Reviewers; and for our own
-parts, we think we could pass our lives very learnedly and classically
-in one of the quadrangles at Oxford, without any idea at all, vegetating
-merely on the air of the place. Chaucer has drawn a beautiful picture of
-a true scholar in his Clerk of Oxenford:
-
- ‘A Clerk ther was of Oxenforde also,
- That unto logik, hadde longe ygo.
- As lene was his hors as is a rake,
- And he was not right fat, I undertake;
- But loked holwe, and thereto soberly.
- Ful thredbare was his overest courtepy,
- For he hadde geten him yit no benefice,
- Ne was nought worldly to have an office.
- For him was lever have at his beddes hed
- A twenty bokes, clothed in blak or red,
- Of Aristotle and his philosophie,
- Then robes riche, or fidel, or sautrie.
- But all be that he was a philosophre,
- Yet hadde he but litel gold in cofre,
- But al that he might of his frendes hente,
- On bokes and on lerning he it spente,
- And besily gan for the soules praie
- Of hem, that gave him wherwith to scolaie.
- Of studie toke he moste care and hede.
- Not a word spake he more than was nede;
- And that was said in forme and reverence,
- And short, and quike, and full of high sentence.
- Sowning in moral vertue was his speche,
- And gladly wolde he lerne, and gladly teche.’
-
-If letters have profited little by throwing down the barrier between
-learned prejudice and ignorant presumption, the arts have profited still
-less by the universal diffusion of accomplishment and pretension. An
-artist is no longer looked upon as any thing, who is not at the same
-time ‘chemist, statesman, fiddler, and buffoon.’ It is expected of him
-that he should be well-dressed, and he is poor; that he should move
-gracefully, and he has never learned to dance; that he should converse
-on all subjects, and he understands but one; that he should be read in
-different languages, and he only knows his own. Yet there is one
-language, the language of Nature, in which it is enough for him to be
-able to read, to find everlasting employment and solace to his thoughts—
-
- ‘Tongues in the trees, books in the running brooks,
- Sermons in stones, and good in every thing.’
-
-He will find no end of his labours or of his triumphs there; yet still
-feel all his strength not more than equal to the task he has begun—his
-whole life too short for art. Rubens complained, that just as he was
-beginning to understand his profession, he was forced to quit it. It was
-a saying of Michael Angelo, that ‘painting was jealous, and required the
-whole man to herself.’ Is it to be supposed that Rembrandt did not find
-sufficient resources against the spleen in the little cell, where
-mystery and silence hung upon his pencil, or the noon-tide ray
-penetrated the solemn gloom around him, without the aid of modern
-newspapers, novels, and reviews? Was he not more wisely employed, while
-devoted solely to his art—married to that immortal bride! We do not
-imagine Sir Joshua Reynolds was much happier for having written his
-lectures, nor for the learned society he kept, friendship apart; and
-learned society is not necessary to friendship. He was evidently, as far
-as conversation was concerned, little at his ease in it; and he was
-always glad, as he himself said, after he had been entertained at the
-houses of the great, to get back to his painting-room again. Any one
-settled pursuit, together with the ordinary alternations of leisure,
-exercise, and amusement, and the natural feelings and relations of
-society, is quite enough to take up the whole of our thoughts, time, and
-affections; and any thing beyond this will, generally speaking, only
-tend to dissipate and distract the mind. There is no end of
-accomplishments, of the prospect of new acquisitions of taste or skill,
-or of the uneasiness arising from the want of them, if we once indulge
-in this idle habit of vanity and affectation. The mind is never
-satisfied with what it is, but is always looking out for fanciful
-perfections, which it can neither attain nor practise. Our failure in
-any one object is fatal to our enjoyment of all the rest; and the
-chances of disappointment multiply with the number of our pursuits. In
-catching at the shadow, we lose the substance. No man can thoroughly
-master more than one art or science. The world has never seen a perfect
-painter. What would it have availed for Raphael to have aimed at
-Titian’s colouring, or for Titian to have imitated Raphael’s drawing,
-but to have diverted each from the true bent of his natural genius, and
-to have made each sensible of his own deficiencies, without any
-probability of supplying them? Pedantry in art, in learning, in every
-thing, is the setting an extraordinary value on that which we can do,
-and that which we understand best, and which it is our business to do
-and understand. Where is the harm of this? To possess or even understand
-all kinds of excellence equally, is impossible; and to pretend to admire
-that to which we are indifferent, as much as that which is of the
-greatest use, and which gives the greatest pleasure to us, is not
-liberality, but affectation. Is an artist, for instance, to be required
-to feel the same admiration for the works of Handel as for those of
-Raphael? If he is sincere, he cannot: and a man, to be free from
-pedantry, must be either a coxcomb or a hypocrite. Vestris was so far in
-the right, in saying that Voltaire and he were the two greatest men in
-Europe. Voltaire was so in the public opinion, and he was so in his own.
-Authors and literary people have been unjustly accused for arrogating an
-exclusive preference to letters over other arts. They are justified in
-doing this, because words are the most natural and universal language,
-and because they have the sympathy of the world with them. Poets, for
-the same reason, have a right to be the vainest of authors. The
-prejudice attached to established reputation is, in like manner,
-perfectly well founded, because that which has longest excited our
-admiration and the admiration of mankind, is most entitled to
-admiration, on the score of habit, sympathy, and deference to public
-opinion. There is a sentiment attached to classical reputation, which
-cannot belong to new works of genius, till they become old in their
-turn.
-
-There appears to be a natural division of labour in the ornamental as
-well as the mechanical arts of human life. We do not see why a nobleman
-should wish to shine as a poet, any more than to be dubbed a knight, or
-to be created Lord Mayor of London. If he succeeds, he gains nothing;
-and then if he is damned, what a ridiculous figure he makes! The great,
-instead of rivalling them, should keep authors, as they formerly kept
-fools,—a practice in itself highly laudable, and the disuse of which
-might be referred to as the first symptom of the degeneracy of modern
-times, and dissolution of the principles of social order! But of all the
-instances of a profession now unjustly obsolete, commend us to the
-alchemist. We see him sitting fortified in his prejudices, with his
-furnace, his diagrams, and his alembics; smiling at disappointments as
-proofs of the sublimity of his art, and the earnest of his future
-success: wondering at his own knowledge and the incredulity of others;
-fed with hope to the last gasp, and having all the pleasures without the
-pain of madness. What is there in the discoveries of modern chemistry
-equal to the very names of the ELIXIR VITÆ and the AURUM POTABILE!
-
-In _Froissard’s Chronicles_ there is an account of a reverend Monk who
-had been a robber in the early part of his life, and who, when he grew
-old, used feelingly to lament that he had ever changed his profession.
-He said, ‘It was a goodly sight to sally out from his castle, and to see
-a troop of jolly friars coming riding that way, with their mules well
-laden with viands and rich stores, to advance towards them, to attack
-and overthrow them, returning to the castle with a noble booty.’ He
-preferred this mode of life to counting his beads and chaunting his
-vespers, and repented that he had ever been prevailed on to relinquish
-so laudable a calling. In this confession of remorse, we may be sure
-that there was no hypocrisy.
-
-The difference in the character of the gentlemen of the present age and
-those of the old school, has been often insisted on. The character of a
-gentleman is a _relative term_, which can hardly subsist where there is
-no marked distinction of persons. The diffusion of knowledge, of
-artificial and intellectual equality, tends to level this distinction,
-and to confound that nice perception and high sense of honour, which
-arises from conspicuousness of situation, and a perpetual attention to
-personal propriety and the claims of personal respect. The age of
-chivalry is gone with the improvements in the art of war, which
-superseded the exercise of personal courage; and the character of a
-gentleman must disappear with those general refinements in manners,
-which render the advantages of rank and situation accessible almost to
-every one. The bag-wig and sword naturally followed the fate of the
-helmet and the spear, when these outward insignia no longer implied
-acknowledged superiority, and were a distinction without a difference.
-
-The spirit of chivalrous and romantic love proceeded on the same
-exclusive principle. It was an enthusiastic adoration, an idolatrous
-worship paid to sex and beauty. This, even in its blindest excess, was
-better than the cold indifference and prostituted gallantry of this
-philosophic age. The extreme tendency of civilisation is to dissipate
-all intellectual energy, and dissolve all moral principle. We are
-sometimes inclined to regret the innovations on the Catholic religion.
-It was a noble charter for ignorance, dullness, and prejudice of all
-kinds, (perhaps, after all, ‘the sovereign’st things on earth’), and put
-an effectual stop to the vanity and restlessness of opinion. ‘It wrapped
-the human understanding all round like a blanket.’ Since the
-Reformation, altars, unsprinkled by holy oil, are no longer sacred; and
-thrones, unsupported by the divine right, have become uneasy and
-insecure.
-
- W. H.
-
-
- NO. 24.] ON THE CHARACTER OF ROUSSEAU [APRIL 14, 1816.
-
-Madame de Stael, in her Letters on the Writings and Character of
-Rousseau, gives it as her opinion, ‘that the imagination was the first
-faculty of his mind, and that this faculty even absorbed all the
-others.’[54] And she farther adds, ‘Rousseau had great strength of
-reason on abstract questions, or with respect to objects, which have no
-reality but in the mind.’[55] Both these opinions are radically wrong.
-Neither imagination nor reason can properly be said to have been the
-original predominant faculties of his mind. The strength both of
-imagination and reason, which he possessed, was borrowed from the excess
-of another faculty; and the weakness and poverty of reason and
-imagination, which are to be found in his works, may be traced to the
-same source, namely, that these faculties in him were artificial,
-secondary, and dependant, operating by a power not theirs, but lent to
-them. The only quality which he possessed in an eminent degree, which
-alone raised him above ordinary men, and which gave to his writings and
-opinions an influence greater, perhaps, than has been exerted by any
-individual in modern times, was extreme sensibility, or an acute and
-even morbid feeling of all that related to his own impressions, to the
-objects and events of his life. He had the most intense consciousness of
-his own existence. No object that had once made an impression on him was
-ever after effaced. Every feeling in his mind became a passion. His
-craving after excitement was an appetite and a disease. His interest in
-his own thoughts and feelings was always wound up to the highest pitch;
-and hence the enthusiasm which he excited in others. He owed the power
-which he exercised over the opinions of all Europe, by which he created
-numberless disciples, and overturned established systems, to the tyranny
-which his feelings, in the first instance, exercised over himself. The
-dazzling blaze of his reputation was kindled by the same fire that fed
-upon his vitals.[56] His ideas differed from those of other men only in
-their force and intensity. His genius was the effect of his temperament.
-He created nothing, he demonstrated nothing, by a pure effort of the
-understanding. His fictitious characters are modifications of his own
-being, reflections and shadows of himself. His speculations are the
-obvious exaggerations of a mind, giving a loose to its habitual
-impulses, and moulding all nature to its own purposes. Hence his
-enthusiasm and his eloquence, bearing down all opposition. Hence the
-warmth and the luxuriance, as well as the sameness of his descriptions.
-Hence the frequent verboseness of his style; for passion lends force and
-reality to language, and makes words supply the place of imagination.
-Hence the tenaciousness of his logic, the acuteness of his observations,
-the refinement and the inconsistency of his reasoning. Hence his keen
-penetration, and his strange want of comprehension of mind: for the same
-intense feeling which enabled him to discern the first principles of
-things, and seize some one view of a subject in all its ramifications,
-prevented him from admitting the operation of other causes which
-interfered with his favourite purpose, and involved him in endless
-wilful contradictions. Hence his excessive egotism, which filled all
-objects with himself, and would have occupied the universe with his
-smallest interest. Hence his jealousy and suspicion of others; for no
-attention, no respect or sympathy, could come up to the extravagant
-claims of his self-love. Hence his dissatisfaction with himself and with
-all around him; for nothing could satisfy his ardent longings after
-good, his restless appetite of being. Hence his feelings, overstrained
-and exhausted, recoiled upon themselves, and produced his love of
-silence and repose, his feverish aspirations after the quiet and
-solitude of nature. Hence in part also his quarrel with the artificial
-institutions and distinctions of society, which opposed so many barriers
-to the unrestrained indulgence of his will, and allured his imagination
-to scenes of pastoral simplicity or of savage life, where the passions
-were either not excited or left to follow their own impulse,—where the
-petty vexations and irritating disappointments of common life had no
-place,—and where the tormenting pursuits of arts and sciences were lost
-in pure animal enjoyment, or indolent repose. Thus he describes the
-first savage wandering for ever under the shade of magnificent forests,
-or by the side of mighty rivers, smit with the unquenchable love of
-nature!
-
-The best of all his works is the _Confessions_, though it is that which
-has been least read, because it contains the fewest set paradoxes or
-general opinions. It relates entirely to himself; and no one was ever so
-much at home on this subject as he was. From the strong hold which they
-had taken of his mind, he makes us enter into his feelings as if they
-had been our own, and we seem to remember every incident and
-circumstance of his life as if it had happened to ourselves. We are
-never tired of this work, for it everywhere presents us with pictures
-which we can fancy to be counterparts of our own existence. The passages
-of this sort are innumerable. There is the interesting account of his
-childhood, the constraints and thoughtless liberty of which are so well
-described; of his sitting up all night reading romances with his father,
-till they were forced to desist by hearing the swallows twittering in
-their nests; his crossing the Alps, described with all the feelings
-belonging to it, his pleasure in setting out, his satisfaction in coming
-to his journey’s end, the delight of ‘coming and going he knew not
-where’; his arriving at Turin; the figure of Madame Basile, drawn with
-such inimitable precision and elegance; the delightful adventure of the
-Chateau de Toune, where he passed the day with Mademoiselle G**** and
-Mademoiselle Galley; the story of his Zulietta, the proud, the charming
-Zulietta, whose last words, ‘_Va Zanetto, e studia la Matematica_,’ were
-never to be forgotten; his sleeping near Lyons in a niche of the wall,
-after a fine summer’s day, with a nightingale perched above his head;
-his first meeting with Madame Warens, the pomp of sound with which he
-has celebrated her name, beginning ‘_Louise Eleonore de Warens étoit une
-demoiselle de la Tour de Pil, noble et ancienne famille de Vevai, ville
-du pays de Vaud_’ (sounds which we still tremble to repeat); his
-description of her person, her angelic smile, her mouth of the size of
-his own; his walking out one day while the bells were chiming to
-vespers, and anticipating in a sort of waking dream the life he
-afterwards led with her, in which months and years, and life itself
-passed away in undisturbed felicity; the sudden disappointment of his
-hopes; his transport thirty years after at seeing the same flower which
-they had brought home together from one of their rambles near Chambery;
-his thoughts in that long interval of time; his suppers with Grimm and
-Diderot after he came to Paris; the first idea of his prize dissertation
-on the savage state; his account of writing the _New Eloise_, and his
-attachment to Madame d’Houdetot; his literary projects, his fame, his
-misfortunes, his unhappy temper; his last solitary retirement in the
-lake and island of Bienne, with his dog and his boat; his reveries and
-delicious musings there; all these crowd into our minds with
-recollections which we do not chuse to express. There are no passages in
-the _New Eloise_ of equal force and beauty with the best descriptions in
-the _Confessions_, if we except the excursion on the water, Julia’s last
-letter to St. Preux, and his letter to her, recalling the days of their
-first loves. We spent two whole years in reading these two works; and
-(gentle reader, it was when we were young) in shedding tears over them
-
- ——‘As fast as the Arabian trees
- Their medicinal gums.’
-
-They were the happiest years of our life. We may well say of them, sweet
-is the dew of their memory, and pleasant the balm of their recollection!
-There are, indeed, impressions which neither time nor circumstances can
-efface.[57]
-
-Rousseau, in all his writings, never once lost sight of himself. He was
-the same individual from first to last. The spring that moved his
-passions never went down, the pulse that agitated his heart never ceased
-to beat. It was this strong feeling of interest, accumulating in his
-mind, which overpowers and absorbs the feelings of his readers. He owed
-all his power to sentiment. The writer who most nearly resembles him in
-our own times is the author of the _Lyrical Ballads_. We see no other
-difference between them, than that the one wrote in prose and the other
-in poetry; and that prose is perhaps better adapted to express those
-local and personal feelings, which are inveterate habits in the mind,
-than poetry, which embodies its imaginary creations. We conceive that
-Rousseau’s exclamation, ‘_Ah, voila de la pervenche_,’ comes more home
-to the mind than Mr. Wordsworth’s discovery of the linnet’s nest ‘with
-five blue eggs,’ or than his address to the cuckoo, beautiful as we
-think it is; and we will confidently match the Citizen of Geneva’s
-adventures on the Lake of Bienne against the Cumberland Poet’s floating
-dreams on the Lake of Grasmere. Both create an interest out of nothing,
-or rather out of their own feelings; both weave numberless recollections
-into one sentiment; both wind their own being round whatever object
-occurs to them. But Rousseau, as a prose-writer, gives only the habitual
-and personal impression. Mr. Wordsworth, as a poet, is forced to lend
-the colours of imagination to impressions which owe all their force to
-their identity with themselves, and tries to paint what is only to be
-felt. Rousseau, in a word, interests you in certain objects by
-interesting you in himself: Mr. Wordsworth would persuade you that the
-most insignificant objects are interesting in themselves, because he is
-interested in them. If he had met with Rousseau’s favourite periwinkle,
-he would have _translated_ it into the most beautiful of flowers. This
-is not imagination, but want of sense. If his jealousy of the sympathy
-of others makes him avoid what is beautiful and grand in nature, why
-does he undertake elaborately to describe other objects? _His_ nature is
-a mere Dulcinea del Toboso, and he would make a Vashti of her. Rubens
-appears to have been as extravagantly attached to his three wives, as
-Raphael was to his Fornarina; but their faces were not so classical. The
-three greatest egotists that we know of, that is, the three writers who
-felt their own being most powerfully and exclusively, are Rousseau,
-Wordsworth, and Benvenuto Cellini. As Swift somewhere says, we defy the
-world to furnish out a fourth.
-
- W. H.
-
-
- NO. 25.] ON DIFFERENT SORTS OF FAME [APRIL 21, 1816.
-
-There is a half serious, half ironical argument in Melmoth’s
-_Fitz-Osborn’s Letters_, to shew the futility of posthumous fame, which
-runs thus: ‘The object of any one who is inspired with this passion is
-to be remembered by posterity with admiration and delight, as having
-been possessed of certain powers and excellences which distinguished him
-above his contemporaries. But posterity, it is said, can know nothing of
-the individual but from the memory of these qualities which he has left
-behind him. All that we know of Julius Cæsar, for instance, is that he
-was the person who performed certain actions, and wrote a book called
-his _Commentaries_. When, therefore, we extol Julius Cæsar for his
-actions or his writings, what do we say but that the person who
-performed certain things did perform them; that the author of such a
-work was the person who wrote it; or, in short, that Julius Cæsar was
-Julius Cæsar? Now this is a mere truism, and the desire to be the
-subject of such an identical proposition must, therefore, be an evident
-absurdity.’ The sophism is a tolerably ingenious one, but it is a
-sophism, nevertheless. It would go equally to prove the nullity, not
-only of posthumous fame, but of living reputation; for the good or the
-bad opinion which my next-door neighbour may entertain of me is nothing
-more than his conviction that such and such a person having certain good
-or bad qualities is possessed of them; nor is the figure, which a
-Lord-Mayor elect, a prating demagogue, or popular preacher, makes in the
-eyes of the admiring multitude—_himself_, but an image of him reflected
-in the minds of others, in connection with certain feelings of respect
-and wonder. In fact, whether the admiration we seek is to last for a day
-or for eternity, whether we are to have it while living or after we are
-dead, whether it is to be expressed by our contemporaries or by future
-generations, the principle of it is the same—_sympathy with the feelings
-of others_, and the necessary tendency which the idea or consciousness
-of the approbation of others has to strengthen the suggestions of our
-self-love.[58] We are all inclined to think well of ourselves, of our
-sense and capacity in whatever we undertake; but from this very desire
-to think well of ourselves, we are (as _Mrs. Peachum_ says) ‘_bitter_
-bad judges’ of our own pretensions; and when our vanity flatters us
-most, we ought in general to suspect it most. We are, therefore, glad to
-get the good opinion of a friend, but that may be partial; the good word
-of a stranger is likely to be more sincere, but he may be a blockhead;
-the multitude will agree with us, if we agree with them; accident, the
-caprice of fashion, the prejudice of the moment, may give a fleeting
-reputation; our only certain appeal, therefore, is to posterity; the
-voice of fame is alone the voice of truth. In proportion, however, as
-this award is final and secure, it is remote and uncertain. Voltaire
-said to some one, who had addressed an Epistle to Posterity, ‘I am
-afraid, my friend, this letter will never be delivered according to its
-direction.’ It can exist only in imagination; and we can only presume
-upon our claim to it, as we prefer the hope of lasting fame to every
-thing else. The love of fame is almost another name for the love of
-excellence; or it is the ambition to attain the highest excellence,
-sanctioned by the highest authority, that of time. Vanity, and the love
-of fame, are quite distinct from each other; for the one is voracious of
-the most obvious and doubtful applause, whereas the other rejects or
-overlooks every kind of applause but that which is purified from every
-mixture of flattery, and identified with truth and nature itself. There
-is, therefore, something disinterested in this passion, inasmuch as it
-is abstracted and ideal, and only appeals to opinion as a standard of
-truth; it is this which ‘makes ambition virtue.’ Milton had as fine an
-idea as any one of true fame; and Dr. Johnson has very beautifully
-described his patient and confident anticipations of the success of his
-great poem in the account of _Paradise Lost_. He has, indeed, done the
-same thing himself in _Lycidas_:
-
- ‘Fame is the spur that the clear spirit doth raise
- (That last infirmity of noble mind)
- To scorn delights, and live laborious days;
- But the fair Guerdon when we hope to find,
- And think to burst out into sudden blaze,
- Comes the blind Fury with th’ abhorred shears,
- And slits the thin-spun life. But not the praise,
- Phœbus replied, and touch’d my trembling ears.’
-
-None but those who have sterling pretensions can afford to refer them to
-time; as persons who live upon their means cannot well go into Chancery.
-No feeling can be more at variance with the true love of fame than that
-impatience which we have sometimes witnessed to ‘pluck its fruits,
-unripe and crude,’ before the time, to make a little echo of popularity
-mimic the voice of fame, and to convert a prize-medal or a
-newspaper-puff into a passport to immortality.
-
-When we hear any one complaining that he has not the same fame as some
-poet or painter who lived two hundred years ago, he seems to us to
-complain that he has not been dead these two hundred years. When his
-fame has undergone the same ordeal, that is, has lasted as long, it will
-be as good, if he really deserves it. We think it equally absurd, when
-we sometimes find people objecting, that such an acquaintance of theirs,
-who has not an idea in his head, should be so much better off in the
-world than they are. But it is for this very reason; they have preferred
-the indulgence of their ideas to the pursuit of realities. It is but
-fair that he who has no ideas should have something in their stead. If
-he who has devoted his time to the study of beauty, to the pursuit of
-truth, whose object has been to govern opinion, to form the taste of
-others, to instruct or to amuse the public, succeeds in this respect, he
-has no more right to complain that he has not a title or a fortune, than
-he who has not purchased a ticket, that is, who has taken no means to
-the end, has a right to complain that he has not a prize in the lottery.
-
-In proportion as men can command the immediate and vulgar applause of
-others, they become indifferent to that which is remote and difficult of
-attainment. We take pains only when we are compelled to do it. Little
-men are remarked to have courage; little women to have wit; and it is
-seldom that a man of genius is a coxcomb in his dress. Rich men are
-contented not to be thought wise; and the Great often think themselves
-well off, if they can escape being the jest of their acquaintance.
-Authors were actuated by the desire of the applause of posterity, only
-so long as they were debarred of that of their contemporaries, just as
-we see the map of the gold-mines of Peru hanging in the room of
-Hogarth’s _Distressed Poet_. In the midst of the ignorance and
-prejudices with which they were surrounded, they had a sort of _forlorn
-hope_ in the prospect of immortality. The spirit of universal criticism
-has superseded the anticipation of posthumous fame, and instead of
-waiting for the award of distant ages, the poet or prose-writer receives
-his final doom from the next number of the _Edinburgh_ or _Quarterly
-Review_. According as the nearness of the applause increases, our
-impatience increases with it. A writer in a weekly journal engages with
-reluctance in a monthly publication: and again, a contributor to a daily
-paper sets about his task with greater spirit than either of them. It is
-like prompt payment. The effort and the applause go together. We,
-indeed, have known a man of genius and eloquence, to whom, from a habit
-of excessive talking, the certainty of seeing what he wrote in print the
-next day was too remote a stimulus for his imagination, and who
-constantly laid aside his pen in the middle of an article, if a friend
-dropped in, to finish the subject more effectually aloud, so that the
-approbation of his hearer, and the sound of his own voice might be
-co-instantaneous. Members of Parliament seldom turn authors, except to
-print their speeches when they have not been distinctly heard or
-understood; and great orators are generally very indifferent writers,
-from want of sufficient inducement to exert themselves, when the
-immediate effect on others is not perceived, and the irritation of
-applause or opposition ceases.
-
-There have been in the last century two singular examples of literary
-reputation, the one of an author without a name, and the other of a name
-without an author. We mean the author of _Junius’s Letters_, and the
-translator of the mottos to the _Rambler_, whose name was Elphinstone.
-The _Rambler_ was published in the year 1750, and the name of
-Elphinstone prefixed to each paper is familiar to every literary reader,
-since that time, though we know nothing more of him. We saw this
-gentleman, since the commencement of the present century, looking over a
-clipped hedge in the country, with a broad-flapped hat, a venerable
-countenance, and his dress cut out with the same formality as his
-ever-greens. His name had not only survived half a century in
-conjunction with that of Johnson, but he had survived with it, enjoying
-all the dignity of a classical reputation, and the ease of a literary
-sinecure, on the strength of his mottos. The author of _Junius’s
-Letters_ is, on the contrary, as remarkable an instance of a writer who
-has arrived at all the public honours of literature, without being known
-by name to a single individual, and who may be said to have realised all
-the pleasure of posthumous fame, while living, without the smallest
-gratification of personal vanity. An anonymous writer may feel an acute
-interest in what is said of his productions, and a secret satisfaction
-in their success, because it is not the effect of personal
-considerations, as the overhearing any one speak well of us is more
-agreeable than a direct compliment. But this very satisfaction will
-tempt him to communicate his secret. This temptation, however, does not
-extend beyond the circle of his acquaintance. With respect to the
-public, who know an author only by his writings, it is of little
-consequence whether he has a real or a fictitious name, or a signature,
-so that they have some clue by which to associate the works with the
-author. In the case of _Junius_, therefore, where other personal
-considerations of interest or connections might immediately counteract
-and set aside this temptation, the triumph over the mere vanity of
-authorship might not have cost him so dear as we are at first inclined
-to imagine. Suppose it to have been the old Marquis of ——? It is quite
-out of the question that he should keep his places and not keep his
-secret. If ever the King should die, we think it not impossible that the
-secret may out. Certainly the _accouchement_ of any princess in Europe
-would not excite an equal interest. ‘And you, then, Sir, are the author
-of _Junius_!’ What a recognition for the public and the author! That
-between Yorick and the Frenchman was a trifle to it.
-
-We have said that we think the desire to be known by name as an author
-chiefly has a reference to those to whom we are known personally, and is
-strongest with regard to those who know most of our persons and least of
-our capacities. We wish to _subpœna_ the public to our characters. Those
-who, by great services or great meannesses, have attained titles, always
-take them from the place with which they have the earliest associations,
-and thus strive to throw a veil of importance over the insignificance of
-their original pretensions, or the injustice of fortune. When Lord
-Nelson was passing over the quay at Yarmouth, to take possession of the
-ship to which he had been appointed, the people exclaimed, ‘Why make
-that little fellow a captain?’ He thought of this when he fought the
-battles of the Nile and Trafalgar. The same sense of personal
-insignificance which made him great in action made him a fool in love.
-If Bonaparte had been six inches higher, he never would have gone on
-that disastrous Russian expedition, nor ‘with that addition’ would he
-ever have been Emperor and King. For our own parts, one object which we
-have in writing these Essays, is to send them in a volume to a person
-who took some notice of us when children, and who augured, perhaps,
-better of us than we deserved. In fact, the opinion of those who know us
-most, who are a kind of second self in our recollections, is a sort of
-second conscience; and the approbation of one or two friends is all the
-immortality _we_ pretend to.
-
- A.
-
-
- NO. 26.] CHARACTER OF JOHN BULL [MAY 19, 1816.
-
-In a late number of a respectable publication, there is the following
-description of the French character:—
-
-‘Extremes meet. This is the only way of accounting for that enigma, the
-French character. It has often been remarked, that this ingenious nation
-exhibits more striking contradictions than any other that ever existed.
-They are the gayest of the gay, and the gravest of the grave. Their very
-faces pass at once from an expression of the most lively animation, when
-they are in conversation or in action, to a melancholy blank. They are
-the lightest and most volatile, and at the same time the most plodding,
-mechanical, and laborious people in Europe. They are one moment the
-slaves of the most contemptible prejudices, and the next launch out into
-all the extravagance of the most abstract speculations. In matters of
-taste they are as inexorable as they are lax in questions of morality;
-they judge of the one by rules, of the other by their inclinations. It
-seems at times as if nothing could shock them, and yet they are offended
-at the merest trifles. The smallest things make the greatest impression
-on them. From the facility with which they can accommodate themselves to
-circumstances, they have no fixed principles or real character. They are
-always that which gives them least pain, or costs them least trouble.
-They easily disentangle their thoughts from whatever causes the
-slightest uneasiness, and direct their sensibility to flow in any
-channels they think proper. Their whole existence is more theatrical
-than real—their sentiments put on or off like the dress of an actor.
-Words are with them equivalent to things. They say what is agreeable,
-and believe what they say. Virtue and vice, good and evil, liberty and
-slavery, are matters almost of indifference. Their natural
-self-complacency stands them in stead of all other advantages.’
-
-The foregoing account is pretty near the truth; we have nothing to say
-against it; but we shall here endeavour to do a like piece of justice to
-our countrymen, who are too apt to mistake the vices of others for so
-many virtues in themselves.
-
-If a Frenchman is pleased with every thing, John Bull is pleased with
-nothing, and that is a fault. He is, to be sure, fond of having his own
-way, till you let him have it. He is a very headstrong animal, who
-mistakes the spirit of contradiction for the love of independence, and
-proves himself to be in the right by the obstinacy with which he
-stickles for the wrong. You cannot put him so much out of his way as by
-agreeing with him. He is never in such good-humour as with what gives
-him the spleen, and is most satisfied when he is sulky. If you find
-fault with him, he is in a rage; and if you praise him, suspects you
-have a design upon him. He recommends himself to another by affronting
-him, and if that will not do, knocks him down to convince him of his
-sincerity. He gives himself such airs as no mortal ever did, and wonders
-at the rest of the world for not thinking him the most amiable person
-breathing. John means well too, but he has an odd way of showing it, by
-a total disregard of other people’s feelings and opinions. He is
-sincere, for he tells you at the first word he does not like you; and
-never deceives, for he never offers to serve you. A civil answer is too
-much to expect from him. A word costs him more than a blow. He is silent
-because he has nothing to say, and he looks stupid because he is so. He
-has the strangest notions of beauty. The expression he values most in
-the human countenance is an appearance of roast beef and plum-pudding;
-and if he has a red face and round belly, thinks himself a great man. He
-is a little purse-proud, and has a better opinion of himself for having
-made a full meal. But his greatest delight is in a bugbear. This he must
-have, be the consequence what it may. Whoever will give him that, may
-lead him by the nose, and pick his pocket at the same time. An idiot in
-a country town, a Presbyterian parson, a dog with a cannister tied to
-his tail, a bull-bait, or a fox-hunt, are irresistible attractions to
-him. The Pope was formerly his great aversion, and latterly, a cap of
-liberty is a thing he cannot abide. He discarded the Pope, and defied
-the Inquisition, called the French a nation of slaves and beggars, and
-abused their _Grand Monarque_ for a tyrant, cut off one king’s head, and
-exiled another, set up a Dutch Stadtholder, and elected a Hanoverian
-Elector to be king over him, to shew he would have his own way, and to
-teach the rest of the world what they should do: but since other people
-took to imitating his example, John has taken it into his head to hinder
-them, will have a monopoly of rebellion and regicide to himself, has
-become sworn brother to the Pope, and stands by the Inquisition,
-restores his old enemies, the Bourbons, and reads _a great moral lesson_
-to their subjects, persuades himself that the Dutch Stadtholder and the
-Hanoverian Elector came to reign over him by divine right, and does all
-he can to prove himself a beast to make other people slaves. The truth
-is, John was always a surly, meddlesome, obstinate fellow, and of late
-years his _head_ has not been quite right! In short, John is a great
-blockhead and a great bully, and requires (what he has been long
-labouring for) a hundred years of slavery to bring him to his senses. He
-will have it that he is a great patriot, for he hates all other
-countries; that he is wise, for he thinks all other people fools; that
-he is honest, for he calls all other people whores and rogues. If being
-in an ill-humour all one’s life is the perfection of human nature, then
-John is very near it. He beats his wife, quarrels with his neighbours,
-damns his servants, and gets drunk to kill the time and keep up his
-spirits, and firmly believes himself the only unexceptionable,
-accomplished, moral, and religious character in Christendom. He boasts
-of the excellence of the laws, and the goodness of his own disposition;
-and yet there are more people hanged in England than in all Europe
-besides: he boasts of the modesty of his countrywomen, and yet there are
-more prostitutes in the streets of London than in all the capitals of
-Europe put together. He piques himself on his comforts, because he is
-the most uncomfortable of mortals; and because he has no enjoyment in
-society, seeks it, as he says, at his fireside, where he may be stupid
-as a matter of course, sullen as a matter of right, and as ridiculous as
-he chuses without being laughed at. His liberty is the effect of his
-self-will; his religion owing to the spleen; his temper to the climate.
-He is an industrious animal, because he has no taste for amusement, and
-had rather work six days in the week than be idle one. His awkward
-attempts at gaiety are the jest of other nations. ‘They,’ (the English),
-says Froissard, speaking of the meeting of the Black Prince and the
-French King, ‘amused themselves sadly, according to the custom of their
-country,’—_se rejouissoient tristement, selon la coutume de leur pays_.
-Their patience of labour is confined to what is repugnant and
-disagreeable in itself, to the drudgery of the mechanic arts, and does
-not extend to the fine arts; that is, they are indifferent to pain, but
-insensible to pleasure. They will stand in a trench, or march up to a
-breach, but they cannot bear to dwell long on an agreeable object. They
-can no more submit to regularity in art than to decency in behaviour.
-Their pictures are as coarse and slovenly as their address. John boasts
-of his great men, without much right to do so; not that he has not had
-them, but because he neither knows nor cares anything about them but to
-swagger over other nations. That which chiefly hits John’s fancy in
-Shakspeare is that he was a deer-stealer in his youth; and, as for
-Newton’s discoveries, he hardly knows to this day that the earth is
-round. John’s oaths, which are quite characteristic, have got him the
-nickname of _Monsieur God-damn-me_. They are profane, a Frenchman’s
-indecent. One swears by his vices, the other by their punishment. After
-all John’s blustering, he is but a dolt. His habitual jealousy of others
-makes him the inevitable dupe of quacks and impostors of all sorts; he
-goes all lengths with one party out of spite to another; his zeal is as
-furious as his antipathies are unfounded; and there is nothing half so
-absurd or ignorant of its own intentions as an English mob.
-
- Z.
-
-
- NO. 27.] ON GOOD-NATURE [JUNE 9, 1816.
-
-Lord Shaftesbury somewhere remarks, that a great many people pass for
-very good-natured persons, for no other reason than because they care
-about nobody but themselves; and, consequently, as nothing annoys them
-but what touches their own interest, they never irritate themselves
-unnecessarily about what does not concern them, and seem to be made of
-the very milk of human kindness.
-
-Good-nature, or what is often considered as such, is the most selfish of
-all the virtues: it is nine times out of ten mere indolence of
-disposition. A good-natured man is, generally speaking, one who does not
-like to be put out of his way; and as long as he can help it, that is,
-till the provocation comes home to himself, he will not. He does not
-create fictitious uneasiness out of the distresses of others; he does
-not fret and fume, and make himself uncomfortable about things he cannot
-mend, and that no way concern him, even if he could: but then there is
-no one who is more apt to be disconcerted by what puts him to any
-personal inconvenience, however trifling; who is more tenacious of his
-selfish indulgences, however unreasonable; or who resents more violently
-any interruption of his ease and comforts, the very trouble he is put to
-in resenting it being felt as an aggravation of the injury. A person of
-this character feels no emotions of anger or detestation, if you tell
-him of the devastation of a province, or the massacre of the inhabitants
-of a town, or the enslaving of a people; but if his dinner is spoiled by
-a lump of soot falling down the chimney, he is thrown into the utmost
-confusion, and can hardly recover a decent command of his temper for the
-whole day. He thinks nothing can go amiss, so long as he is at his ease,
-though a pain in his little finger makes him so peevish and quarrelsome,
-that nobody can come near him. Knavery and injustice in the abstract are
-things that by no means ruffle his temper, or alter the serenity of his
-countenance, unless he is to be the sufferer by them; nor is he ever
-betrayed into a passion in answering a sophism, if he does not think it
-immediately directed against his own interest.
-
-On the contrary, we sometimes meet with persons who regularly heat
-themselves in an argument, and get out of humour on every occasion, and
-make themselves obnoxious to a whole company about nothing. This is not
-because they are ill-tempered, but because they are in earnest.
-Good-nature is a hypocrite: it tries to pass off its love of its own
-ease and indifference to everything else for a particular softness and
-mildness of disposition. All people get in a passion, and lose their
-temper, if you offer to strike them, or cheat them of their money, that
-is, if you interfere with that which they are really interested in.
-Tread on the heel of one of these good-natured persons, who do not care
-if the whole world is in flames, and see how he will bear it. If the
-truth were known, the most disagreeable people are the most amiable.
-They are the only persons who feel an interest in what does not concern
-them. They have as much regard for others as they have for themselves.
-They have as many vexations and causes of complaint as there are in the
-world. They are general righters of wrongs, and redressers of
-grievances. They not only are annoyed by what they can help, by an act
-of inhumanity done in the next street, or in a neighbouring country by
-their own countrymen, they not only do not claim any share in the glory,
-and hate it the more, the more brilliant the success,—but a piece of
-injustice done three thousand years ago touches them to the quick. They
-have an unfortunate attachment to a set of abstract phrases, such as
-_liberty_, _truth_, _justice_, _humanity_, _honour_, which are
-continually abused by knaves, and misunderstood by fools, and they can
-hardly contain themselves for spleen. They have something to keep them
-in perpetual hot water. No sooner is one question set at rest than
-another rises up to perplex them. They wear themselves to the bone in
-the affairs of other people, to whom they can do no manner of service,
-to the neglect of their own business and pleasure. They tease themselves
-to death about the morality of the Turks, or the politics of the French.
-There are certain words that afflict their ears, and things that
-lacerate their souls, and remain a plague-spot there forever after. They
-have a fellow-feeling with all that has been done, said, or thought in
-the world. They have an interest in all science and in all art. They
-hate a lie as much as a wrong, for truth is the foundation of all
-justice. Truth is the first thing in their thoughts, then mankind, then
-their country, last themselves. They love excellence, and bow to fame,
-which is the shadow of it. Above all, they are anxious to see justice
-done to the dead, as the best encouragement to the living, and the
-lasting inheritance of future generations. They do not like to see a
-great principle undermined, or the fall of a great man. They would
-sooner forgive a blow in the face than a wanton attack on acknowledged
-reputation. The contempt in which the French hold Shakspeare is a
-serious evil to them; nor do they think the matter mended, when they
-hear an Englishman, who would be thought a profound one, say that
-Voltaire was a man without wit. They are vexed to see genius playing at
-Tom Fool, and honesty turned bawd. It gives them a cutting sensation to
-see a number of things which, as they are unpleasant to see, we shall
-not here repeat. In short, they have a passion for truth; they feel the
-same attachment to the idea of what is right, that a knave does to his
-interest, or that a good-natured man does to his ease; and they have as
-many sources of uneasiness as there are actual or supposed deviations
-from this standard in the sum of things, or as there is a possibility of
-folly and mischief in the world.
-
-Principle is a passion for truth; an incorrigible attachment to a
-general proposition. Good-nature is humanity that costs nothing. No
-good-natured man was ever a martyr to a cause, in religion or politics.
-He has no idea of striving against the stream. He may become a good
-courtier and a loyal subject; and it is hard if he does not, for he has
-nothing to do in that case but to consult his ease, interest, and
-outward appearances. The Vicar of Bray was a good-natured man. What a
-pity he was but a vicar! A good-natured man is utterly unfit for any
-situation or office in life that requires integrity, fortitude, or
-generosity,—any sacrifice, except of opinion, or any exertion, but to
-please. A good-natured man will debauch his friend’s mistress, if he has
-an opportunity; and betray his friend, sooner than share disgrace or
-danger with him. He will not forego the smallest gratification to save
-the whole world. He makes his own convenience the standard of right and
-wrong. He avoids the feeling of pain in himself, and shuts his eyes to
-the sufferings of others. He will put a malefactor or an innocent person
-(no matter which) to the rack, and only laugh at the uncouthness of the
-gestures, or wonder that he is so unmannerly as to cry out. There is no
-villainy to which he will not lend a helping hand with great coolness
-and cordiality, for he sees only the pleasant and profitable side of
-things. He will assent to a falsehood with a leer of complacency, and
-applaud any atrocity that comes recommended in the garb of authority. He
-will betray his country to please a Minister, and sign the death-warrant
-of thousands of wretches, rather than forfeit the congenial smile, the
-well-known squeeze of the hand. The shrieks of death, the torture of
-mangled limbs, the last groans of despair, are things that shock his
-smooth humanity too much ever to make an impression on it: his
-good-nature sympathizes only with the smile, the bow, the gracious
-salutation, the fawning answer: vice loses its sting, and corruption its
-poison, in the oily gentleness of his disposition. He will not hear of
-any thing wrong in Church or State. He will defend every abuse by which
-any thing is to be got, every dirty job, every act of every Minister. In
-an extreme case, a very good-natured man indeed may try to hang twelve
-honester men than himself to rise at the Bar, and forge the seal of the
-realm to continue his colleagues a week longer in office. He is a slave
-to the will of others, a coward to their prejudices, a tool of their
-vices. A good-natured man is no more fit to be trusted in public
-affairs, than a coward or a woman is to lead an army. Spleen is the soul
-of patriotism and of public good. Lord Castlereagh is a good-natured
-man, Lord Eldon is a good-natured man, Charles Fox was a good-natured
-man. The last instance is the most decisive. The definition of a true
-patriot is _a good hater_.
-
-A king, who is a good-natured man, is in a fair way of being a great
-tyrant. A king ought to feel concern for all to whom his power extends;
-but a good-natured man cares only about himself. If he has a good
-appetite, eats and sleeps well, nothing in the universe besides can
-disturb him. The destruction of the lives or liberties of his subjects
-will not stop him in the least of his caprices, but will concoct well
-with his bile, and ‘good digestion wait on appetite, and health on
-both.’ He will send out his mandate to kill and destroy with the same
-indifference or satisfaction that he performs any natural function of
-his body. The consequences are placed beyond the reach of his
-imagination, or would not affect him if they were not, for he is a fool,
-and good-natured. A good-natured man hates more than any one else
-whatever thwarts his will, or contradicts his prejudices; and if he has
-the power to prevent it, depend upon it, he will use it without remorse
-and without control.
-
-There is a lower species of this character which is what is usually
-understood by a _well-meaning man_. A well-meaning man is one who often
-does a great deal of mischief without any kind of malice. He means no
-one any harm, if it is not for his interest. He is not a knave, nor
-perfectly honest. He does not easily resign a good place. Mr. Vansittart
-is a well-meaning man.
-
-The Irish are a good-natured people; they have many virtues, but their
-virtues are those of the heart, not of the head. In their passions and
-affections they are sincere, but they are hypocrites in understanding.
-If they once begin to calculate the consequences, self-interest
-prevails. An Irishman who trusts to his principles, and a Scotchman who
-yields to his impulses, are equally dangerous. The Irish have wit,
-genius, eloquence, imagination, affections: but they want coherence of
-understanding, and consequently have no standard of thought or action.
-Their strength of mind does not keep pace with the warmth of their
-feelings, or the quickness of their conceptions. Their animal spirits
-run away with them: their reason is a jade. There is something crude,
-indigested, rash, and discordant, in almost all that they do or say.
-They have no system, no abstract ideas. They are ‘everything by starts,
-and nothing long.’ They are a wild people. They hate whatever imposes a
-law on their understandings, or a yoke on their wills. To betray the
-principles they are most bound by their own professions and the
-expectations of others to maintain, is with them a reclamation of their
-original rights, and to fly in the face of their benefactors and
-friends, an assertion of their natural freedom of will. They want
-consistency and good faith. They unite fierceness with levity. In the
-midst of their headlong impulses, they have an under-current of
-selfishness and cunning, which in the end gets the better of them. Their
-feelings, when no longer excited by novelty or opposition, grow cold and
-stagnant. Their blood, if not heated by passion, turns to poison. They
-have a rancour in their hatred of any object they have abandoned,
-proportioned to the attachment they have professed to it. Their zeal,
-converted against itself, is furious. The late Mr. Burke was an instance
-of an Irish patriot and philosopher. He abused metaphysics, because he
-could make nothing out of them, and turned his back upon liberty, when
-he found he could get nothing more by her.[59]—See to the same purpose
-the winding up of the character of _Judy_ in Miss Edgeworth’s _Castle
-Rackrent_.
-
- T. T.
-
-
- NO. 28.] ON THE CHARACTER OF MILTON’S EVE [JULY 21, 1816.
-
-The difference between the character of _Eve_ in Milton and Shakspeare’s
-female characters is very striking, and it appears to us to be this:
-Milton describes _Eve_ not only as full of love and tenderness for
-_Adam_, but as the constant object of admiration in herself. She is the
-idol of the poet’s imagination, and he paints her whole person with a
-studied profusion of charms. She is the wife, but she is still as much
-as ever the mistress, of _Adam_. She is represented, indeed, as devoted
-to her husband, as twining round him for support ‘as the vine curls her
-tendrils,’ but her own grace and beauty are never lost sight of in the
-picture of conjugal felicity. _Adam’s_ attention and regard are as much
-turned to her as hers to him; for ‘in that first garden of their
-innocence,’ he had no other objects or pursuits to distract his
-attention; she was both his business and his pleasure. Shakspeare’s
-females, on the contrary, seem to exist only in their attachment to
-others. They are pure abstractions of the affections. Their features are
-not painted, nor the colour of their hair. Their hearts only are laid
-open. We are acquainted with _Imogen_, _Miranda_, _Ophelia_, or
-_Desdemona_, by what they thought and felt, but we cannot tell whether
-they were black, brown, or fair. But Milton’s _Eve_ is all of ivory and
-gold. Shakspeare seldom tantalises the reader with a luxurious display
-of the personal charms of his heroines, with a curious inventory of
-particular beauties, except indirectly, and for some other purpose, as
-where _Jachimo_ describes _Imogen_ asleep, or the old men in the
-_Winter’s Tale_ vie with each other in invidious praise of _Perdita_.
-Even in _Juliet_, the most voluptuous and glowing of the class of
-characters here spoken of, we are reminded chiefly of circumstances
-connected with the physiognomy of passion, as in her leaning with her
-cheek upon her arm, or which only convey the general impression of
-enthusiasm made on her lover’s brain. One thing may be said, that
-Shakspeare had not the same opportunities as Milton: for his women were
-clothed, and it cannot be denied that Milton took _Eve_ at a
-considerable disadvantage in this respect. He has accordingly described
-her in all the loveliness of nature, tempting to sight as the fruit of
-the Hesperides guarded by that Dragon old, herself the fairest among the
-flowers of Paradise!
-
-The figures both of _Adam_ and _Eve_ are very prominent in this poem. As
-there is little action in it, the interest is constantly kept up by the
-beauty and grandeur of the images. They are thus introduced:
-
- ‘Two of far nobler shape, erect and tall,
- Godlike erect, with native honour clad,
- In naked majesty seemed lords of all,
- And worthy seemed; for in their looks divine
- The image of their glorious Maker shone:
-
- . . . . .
-
- ——Though both
- Not equal, as their sex not equal seem’d;
- For contemplation he and valour form’d,
- For softness she and sweet attractive grace;
- He for God only, she for God in him.
- His fair large front and eye sublime declar’d
- Absolute rule; and hyacinthine locks
- Round from his parted forelock manly hung
- Clust’ring, but not beneath his shoulders broad;
- She as a veil down to the slender waist
- Her unadorned golden tresses wore
- Dishevell’d, but in wanton ringlets wav’d
- As the vine curls her tendrils, which implied
- Subjection, but required with gentle sway,
- And by her yielded, by him best receiv’d,
- Yielded with coy submission, modest pride,
- And sweet reluctant amorous delay.’
-
-_Eve_ is not only represented as beautiful, but with conscious beauty.
-Shakspeare’s heroines are almost insensible of their charms, and wound
-without knowing it. They are not coquets. If the salvation of mankind
-had depended upon one of them, we don’t know—but the Devil might have
-been baulked. This is but a conjecture! _Eve_ has a great idea of
-herself, and there is some difficulty in prevailing on her to quit her
-own image, the first time she discovers its reflection in the water. She
-gives the following account of herself to _Adam_:
-
- ‘That day I oft remember, when from sleep
- I first awak’d, and found myself repos’d
- Under a shade on flow’rs, much wond’ring where
- And what I was, whence thither brought and how.
- Not distant far from thence a murmuring sound
- Of waters issued from a cave, and spread
- Into a liquid plain, then stood unmov’d
- Pure as the expanse of Heav’n; I thither went
- With unexperienc’d thought, and laid me down
- On the green bank, to look into the clear
- Smooth lake, that to me seem’d another sky.
- As I bent down to look, just opposite
- A shape within the watery gleam appear’d,
- Bending to look on me; I started back,
- It started back; but pleas’d I soon return’d,
- Pleas’d it return’d as soon with answ’ring looks
- Of sympathy and love.’...
-
-The poet afterwards adds:
-
- ‘So spake our general mother, and with eyes
- Of conjugal attraction unreprov’d,
- And meek surrender, half-embracing lean’d
- On our first father; half her swelling breast
- Naked met his under the flowing gold
- Of her loose tresses hid: he in delight
- Both of her beauty and submissive charms;
- Smil’d with superior love, as Jupiter
- On Juno smiles, when he impregns the clouds
- That shed May flowers.’
-
-The same thought is repeated with greater simplicity, and perhaps even
-beauty, in the beginning of the Fifth Book:
-
- ——‘So much the more
- His wonder was to find unawaken’d Eve
- With tresses discompos’d and glowing cheek,
- As through unquiet rest: he on his side
- Leaning half-rais’d, with looks of cordial love
- Hung over her enamour’d, and beheld
- Beauty, which whether waking or asleep
- Shot forth peculiar graces; then, with voice
- Mild, as when Zephyrus on Flora breathes,
- Her hand soft touching, whisper’d thus. Awake
- My fairest, my espous’d, my latest found,
- Heav’n’s last best gift, my ever new delight,
- Awake’....
-
-The general style, indeed, in which _Eve_ is addressed by _Adam_, or
-described by the poet, is in the highest strain of compliment:
-
- ‘When Adam thus to Eve. Fair consort, the hour
- Of night approaches.’...
-
- ‘To whom thus Eve, with perfect beauty adorn’d.’
-
- ‘To whom our general ancestor replied,
- Daughter of God and Man, accomplish’d Eve.’
-
-_Eve_ is herself so well convinced that these epithets are her due, that
-the idea follows her in her sleep, and she dreams of herself as the
-paragon of nature, the wonder of the universe:
-
- ——‘Methought
- Close at mine ear one call’d me forth to walk,
- With gentle voice, I thought it thine; it said,
- Why sleep’st thou, Eve? Now is the pleasant time,
- The cool, the silent, save where silence yields
- To the night-warbling bird, that now awake
- Tunes sweetest his love-labour’d song; now reigns
- Full-orb’d the moon, and with more pleasing light
- Shadowy sets off the face of things; in vain,
- If none regard; Heav’n wakes with all his eyes,
- Whom to behold but thee, Nature’s desire?
- In whose sight all things joy, with ravishment
- Attracted by thy beauty still to gaze.’
-
-This is the very topic, too, on which the Serpent afterwards enlarges
-with so much artful insinuation and fatal confidence of success. ‘So
-talked the spirited sly snake.’ The conclusion of the foregoing scene,
-in which _Eve_ relates her dream and _Adam_ comforts her, is such an
-exquisite piece of description, that, though not to our immediate
-purpose, we cannot refrain from quoting it:
-
- ‘So cheer’d he his fair spouse, and she was cheer’d;
- But silently a gentle tear let fall
- From either eye, and wip’d them with her hair;
- Two other precious drops that ready stood,
- Each in their crystal sluice, he ere they fell
- Kiss’d, as the gracious signs of sweet remorse
- And pious awe, that fear’d to have offended.’
-
-The formal eulogy on _Eve_ which _Adam_ addresses to the Angel, in
-giving an account of his own creation and hers, is full of elaborate
-grace:
-
- ‘Under his forming hands a creature grew,
- . . . . . so lovely fair,
- That what seem’d fair in all the world, seem’d now
- Mean, or in her summ’d up, in her contained
- And in her looks, which from that time infus’d
- Sweetness into my heart, unfelt before,
- And into all things from her air inspir’d
- The spirit of love and amorous delight.’
-
-That which distinguishes Milton from the other poets, who have pampered
-the eye and fed the imagination with exuberant descriptions of female
-beauty, is the moral severity with which he has tempered them. There is
-not a line in his works which tends to licentiousness, or the impression
-of which, if it has such a tendency, is not effectually checked by
-thought and sentiment. The following are two remarkable instances:
-
- ——‘In shadier bower
- More secret and sequester’d, though but feign’d,
- Pan or Sylvanus never slept, nor Nymph,
- Nor Faunus haunted. Here in close recess,
- With flowers, garlands, and sweet-smelling herbs,
- Espoused Eve deck’d first her nuptial bed,
- And heavenly quires the hymenœan sung,
- What day the genial Angel to our sire
- Brought her in naked beauty more adorn’d,
- More lovely than Pandora, whom the Gods
- Endow’d with all their gifts, and O too like
- In sad event, when to th’ unwiser son
- Of Japhet brought by Hermes, she ensnar’d
- Mankind by her fair looks, to be aveng’d
- On him who had stole Jove’s authentic fire.’
-
-The other is a passage of extreme beauty and pathos blended. It is the
-one in which the Angel is described as the guest of our first ancestors:
-
- ——‘Meanwhile at table Eve
- Minister’d naked, and their flowing cups
- With pleasant liquors crown’d: O innocence
- Deserving Paradise! if ever, then,
- Then had the sons of God excuse to have been
- Enamour’d at that sight; but in those hearts
- Love unlibidinous reigned, nor jealousy
- Was understood, the injur’d lover’s Hell.’
-
-The character which a living poet has given of Spenser, would be much
-more true of Milton:
-
- ——‘Yet not more sweet
- Than pure was he, and not more pure than wise;
- High Priest of all the Muses’ mysteries.’
-
-Spenser, on the contrary, is very apt to pry into mysteries which do not
-belong to the Muses. Milton’s voluptuousness is not lascivious or
-sensual. He describes beautiful objects for their own sakes. Spenser has
-an eye to the consequences, and steeps everything in pleasure, often not
-of the purest kind. The want of passion has been brought as an objection
-against Milton, and his _Adam_ and _Eve_ have been considered as rather
-insipid personages, wrapped up in one another, and who excite but little
-sympathy in any one else. We do not feel this objection ourselves: we
-are content to be spectators in such scenes, without any other
-excitement. In general, the interest in Milton is essentially epic, and
-not dramatic; and the difference between the epic and the dramatic is
-this, that in the former the imagination produces the passion, and in
-the latter the passion produces the imagination. The interest of epic
-poetry arises from the contemplation of certain objects in themselves
-grand and beautiful: the interest of dramatic poetry from sympathy with
-the passions and pursuits of others; that is, from the practical
-relations of certain persons to certain objects, as depending on
-accident or will.
-
-The Pyramids of Egypt are epic objects; the imagination of them is
-necessarily attended with passion; but they have no dramatic interest,
-till circumstances connect them with some human catastrophe. Now, a poem
-might be constructed almost entirely of such images, of the highest
-intellectual passion, with little dramatic interest; and it is in this
-way that Milton has in a great measure constructed his poem. That is not
-its fault, but its excellence. The fault is in those who have no idea
-but of one kind of interest. But this question would lead to a longer
-discussion than we have room for at present. We shall conclude these
-extracts from Milton with two passages, which have always appeared to us
-to be highly affecting, and to contain a fine discrimination of
-character:
-
- ‘O unexpected stroke, worse than of Death!
- Must I thus leave thee, Paradise? thus leave
- Thee, native soil, these happy walks and shades,
- Fit haunt of Gods? Where I had hope to spend,
- Quiet, though sad, the respite of that day
- That must be mortal to us both? O flowers,
- That never will in other climate grow,
- My early visitation and my last
- At even, which I bred up with tender hand
- From the first opening bud, and gave ye names,
- Who now shall rear ye to the sun, or rank
- Your tribes, and water from th’ ambrosial fount?
- Thee, lastly, nuptial bow’r, by me adorn’d
- With what to sight or smell was sweet, from thee
- How shall I part, and whither wander down
- Into a lower world, to this obscure
- And wild? how shall we breathe in other air
- Less pure, accustom’d to immortal fruits?’
-
-This is the lamentation of _Eve_ on being driven out of Paradise. Adam’s
-reflections are in a different strain, and still finer. After expressing
-his submission to the will of his Maker, he says:
-
- ‘This most afflicts me, that departing hence
- As from his face I shall be hid, depriv’d
- His blessed countenance; here I could frequent
- With worship place by place where he vouchsaf’d
- Presence divine, and to my sons relate,
- On this mount he appeared, under this tree
- Stood visible, among these pines his voice
- I heard, here with him at this fountain talk’d:
- So many grateful altars I would rear
- Of grassy turf, and pile up every stone
- Of lustre from the brook, in memory
- Or monument to ages, and thereon
- Offer sweet-smelling gums and fruits and flow’rs:
- In yonder nether world where shall I seek
- His bright appearances or footstep trace?
- For though I fled him angry, yet recall’d
- To life prolong’d and promis’d race, I now
- Gladly behold though but his utmost skirts
- Of glory, and far off his steps adore.’
-
- W. H.
-
-
- NO. 29.] OBSERVATIONS ON MR. WORDSWORTH’S POEM [AUG. 21, 28,
- THE EXCURSION 1814.
-
-The poem of The _Excursion_ resembles that part of the country in which
-the scene is laid. It has the same vastness and magnificence, with the
-same nakedness and confusion. It has the same overwhelming, oppressive
-power. It excites or recalls the same sensations which those who have
-traversed that wonderful scenery must have felt. We are surrounded with
-the constant sense and superstitious awe of the collective power of
-matter, of the gigantic and eternal forms of nature, on which, from the
-beginning of time, the hand of man has made no impression. Here are no
-dotted lines, no hedge-row beauties, no box-tree borders, no gravel
-walks, no square mechanic inclosures; all is left loose and irregular in
-the rude chaos of aboriginal nature. The boundaries of hill and valley
-are the poet’s only geography, where we wander with him incessantly over
-deep beds of moss and waving fern, amidst the troops of red-deer and
-wild animals. Such is the severe simplicity of Mr. Wordsworth’s taste,
-that we doubt whether he would not reject a druidical temple, or
-time-hallowed ruin as too modern and artificial for his purpose. He only
-familiarises himself or his readers with a stone, covered with lichens,
-which has slept in the same spot of ground from the creation of the
-world, or with the rocky fissure between two mountains caused by
-thunder, or with a cavern scooped out by the sea. His mind is, as it
-were, coëval with the primary forms of things; his imagination holds
-immediately from nature, and ‘owes no allegiance’ but ‘to the elements.’
-
-The _Excursion_ may be considered as a philosophical pastoral poem,—as a
-scholastic romance. It is less a poem on the country, than on the love
-of the country. It is not so much a description of natural objects, as
-of the feelings associated with them; not an account of the manners of
-rural life, but the result of the poet’s reflections on it. He does not
-present the reader with a lively succession of images or incidents, but
-paints the outgoings of his own heart, the shapings of his own fancy. He
-may be said to create his own materials; his thoughts are his real
-subject. His understanding broods over that which is ‘without form and
-void,’ and ‘makes it pregnant.’ He sees all things in himself. He hardly
-ever avails himself of remarkable objects or situations, but, in
-general, rejects them as interfering with the workings of his own mind,
-as disturbing the smooth, deep, majestic current of his own feelings.
-Thus his descriptions of natural scenery are not brought home distinctly
-to the naked eye by forms and circumstances, but every object is seen
-through the medium of innumerable recollections, is clothed with the
-haze of imagination like a glittering vapour, is obscured with the
-excess of glory, has the shadowy brightness of a waking dream. The image
-is lost in the sentiment, as sound in the multiplication of echoes.
-
- ‘And visions, as prophetic eyes avow,
- Hang on each leaf, and cling to every bough.’
-
-In describing human nature, Mr. Wordsworth equally shuns the common
-‘vantage-grounds of popular story, of striking incident, or fatal
-catastrophe, as cheap and vulgar modes of producing an effect. He scans
-the human race as the naturalist measures the earth’s zone, without
-attending to the picturesque points of view, the abrupt inequalities of
-surface. He contemplates the passions and habits of men, not in their
-extremes, but in their first elements; their follies and vices, not at
-their height, with all their embossed evils upon their heads, but as
-lurking in embryo,—the seeds of the disorder inwoven with our very
-constitution. He only sympathises with those simple forms of feeling,
-which mingle at once with his own identity, or with the stream of
-general humanity. To him the great and the small are the same; the near
-and the remote; what appears, and what only is. The general and the
-permanent, like the Platonic ideas, are his only realities. All
-accidental varieties and individual contrasts are lost in an endless
-continuity of feeling, like drops of water in the ocean-stream! An
-intense intellectual egotism swallows up every thing. Even the dialogues
-introduced in the present volume are soliloquies of the same character,
-taking different views of the subject. The recluse, the pastor, and the
-pedlar, are three persons in one poet. We ourselves disapprove of these
-‘interlocutions between Lucius and Caius’ as impertinent babbling, where
-there is no dramatic distinction of character. But the evident scope and
-tendency of Mr. Wordsworth’s mind is the reverse of dramatic. It resists
-all change of character, all variety of scenery, all the bustle,
-machinery, and pantomime of the stage, or of real life,—whatever might
-relieve, or relax, or change the direction of its own activity, jealous
-of all competition. The power of his mind preys upon itself. It is as if
-there were nothing but himself and the universe. He lives in the busy
-solitude of his own heart; in the deep silence of thought. His
-imagination lends life and feeling only to ‘the bare trees and mountains
-bare’; peoples the viewless tracts of air, and converses with the silent
-clouds!
-
-We could have wished that our author had given to his work the form of a
-didactic poem altogether, with only occasional digressions or allusions
-to particular instances. But he has chosen to encumber himself with a
-load of narrative and description, which sometimes hinders the progress
-and effect of the general reasoning, and which, instead of being inwoven
-with the text, would have come in better in plain prose as notes at the
-end of the volume. Mr. Wordsworth, indeed, says finely, and perhaps as
-truly as finely:
-
- ‘Exchange the shepherd’s frock of native grey
- For robes with regal purple tinged; convert
- The crook into a sceptre; give the pomp
- Of circumstance; and here the tragic Muse
- Shall find apt subjects for her highest art.
- Amid the groves, beneath the shadowy hills,
- The generations are prepared; the pangs,
- The internal pangs, are ready; the dread strife
- Of poor humanity’s afflicted will
- Struggling in vain with ruthless destiny.’
-
-But he immediately declines availing himself of these resources of the
-rustic moralist: for the priest, who officiates as ‘the sad historian of
-the pensive plain’ says in reply:
-
- ‘Our system is not fashioned to preclude
- That sympathy which you for others ask:
- And I could tell, not travelling for my theme
- Beyond the limits of these humble graves,
- Of strange disasters; but I pass them by,
- Loth to disturb what Heaven hath hushed to peace.’
-
-There is, in fact, in Mr. Wordsworth’s mind an evident repugnance to
-admit anything that tells for itself, without the interpretation of the
-poet,—a fastidious antipathy to immediate effect,—a systematic
-unwillingness to share the palm with his subject. Where, however, he has
-a subject presented to him, ‘such as the meeting soul may pierce,’ and
-to which he does not grudge to lend the aid of his fine genius, his
-powers of description and fancy seem to be little inferior to those of
-his classical predecessor, Akenside. Among several others which we might
-select we give the following passage, describing the religion of ancient
-Greece:
-
- ‘In that fair clime, the lonely herdsman, stretch’d
- On the soft grass through half a summer’s day,
- With music lulled his indolent repose:
- And in some fit of weariness, if he,
- When his own breath was silent, chanced to hear
- A distant strain, far sweeter than the sounds
- Which his poor skill could make, his fancy fetch’d,
- Even from the blazing chariot of the sun,
- A beardless youth, who touched a golden lute,
- And filled the illumined groves with ravishment.
- The nightly hunter, lifting up his eyes
- Towards the crescent moon, with grateful heart
- Called on the lovely wanderer, who bestowed
- That timely light, to share his joyous sport:
- And hence, a beaming Goddess with her Nymphs
- Across the lawn and through the darksome grove,
- (Nor unaccompanied with tuneful notes
- By echo multiplied from rock or cave),
- Swept in the storm of chase, as moon and stars
- Glance rapidly along the clouded heavens,
- When winds are blowing strong. The traveller slaked
- His thirst from rill, or gushing fount, and thanked
- The Naiad. Sun beams, upon distant hills
- Gliding apace, with shadows in their train,
- Might, with small help from fancy, be transformed
- Into fleet Oreads, sporting visibly.
- The zephyrs fanning as they passed their wings
- Lacked not for love fair objects, whom they wooed
- With gentle whisper. Withered boughs grotesque,
- Stripped of their leaves and twigs by hoary age,
- From depth of shaggy covert peeping forth
- In the low vale, or on steep mountain side:
- And sometimes intermixed with stirring horns
- Of the live deer, or goat’s depending beard;
- These were the lurking satyrs, a wild brood
- Of gamesome Deities! or Pan himself,
- The simple shepherd’s awe-inspiring God.’
-
-The foregoing is one of a succession of splendid passages equally
-enriched with philosophy and poetry, tracing the fictions of Eastern
-mythology to the immediate intercourse of the imagination with Nature,
-and to the habitual propensity of the human mind to endow the outward
-forms of being with life and conscious motion. With this expansive and
-animating principle, Mr. Wordsworth has forcibly, but somewhat severely,
-contrasted the cold, narrow, lifeless spirit of modern philosophy:
-
- ‘How, shall our great discoverers obtain
- From sense and reason less than these obtained,
- Though far misled? Shall men for whom our age
- Unbaffled powers of vision hath prepared,
- To explore the world without and world within,
- Be joyless as the blind? Ambitious souls—
- Whom earth at this late season hath produced
- To regulate the moving spheres, and weigh
- The planets in the hollow of their hand;
- And they who rather dive than soar, whose pains
- Have solved the elements, or analysed
- The thinking principle—shall they in fact
- Prove a degraded race? And what avails
- Renown, if their presumption make them such?
- Inquire of ancient wisdom; go, demand
- Of mighty nature, if ’twas ever meant
- That we should pry far off, yet be unraised;
- That we should pore, and dwindle as we pore,
- Viewing all objects unremittingly
- In disconnection dead and spiritless;
- And still dividing and dividing still
- Break down all grandeur, still unsatisfied
- With the perverse attempt, while littleness
- May yet become more little; waging thus
- An impious warfare with the very life
- Of our own souls! And if indeed there be
- An all-pervading spirit, upon whom
- Our dark foundations rest, could he design,
- That this magnificent effect of power,
- The earth we tread, the sky which we behold
- By day, and all the pomp which night reveals,
- That these—and that superior mystery,
- Our vital frame, so fearfully devised,
- And the dread soul within it—should exist
- Only to be examined, pondered, searched,
- Probed, vexed, and criticised—to be prized
- No more than as a mirror that reflects
- To proud Self-love her own intelligence?’
-
-From the chemists and metaphysicians our author turns to the laughing
-sage of France, Voltaire. ‘Poor gentleman, it fares no better with him,
-for he’s a wit.’ We cannot, however, agree with Mr. Wordsworth that
-_Candide_ is _dull_. It is, if our author pleases, ‘the production of a
-scoffer’s pen,’ or it is any thing but dull. It may not be proper in a
-grave, discreet, orthodox, promising young divine, who studies his
-opinions in the contraction or distension of his patron’s brow, to allow
-any merit to a work like _Candide_; but we conceive that it would have
-been more manly in Mr. Wordsworth, nor do we think it would have hurt
-the cause he espouses, if he had blotted out the epithet, after it had
-peevishly escaped him. Whatsoever savours of a little, narrow,
-inquisitorial spirit, does not sit well on a poet and a man of genius.
-The prejudices of a philosopher are not natural. There is a frankness
-and sincerity of opinion, which is a paramount obligation in all
-questions of intellect, though it may not govern the decisions of the
-spiritual courts, who may, however, be safely left to take care of their
-own interests. There is a plain directness and simplicity of
-understanding, which is the only security against the evils of levity,
-on the one hand, or of hypocrisy on the other. A speculative bigot is a
-solecism in the intellectual world. We can assure Mr. Wordsworth, that
-we should not have bestowed so much serious consideration on a single
-voluntary perversion of language, but that our respect for his character
-makes us jealous of his smallest faults!
-
-With regard to his general philippic against the contractedness and
-egotism of philosophical pursuits, we only object to its not being
-carried further. We shall not affirm with Rousseau (his authority would
-perhaps have little weight with Mr. Wordsworth)—‘_Tout homme reflechi
-est mechant_‘; but we conceive that the same reasoning which Mr.
-Wordsworth applies so eloquently and justly to the natural philosopher
-and metaphysician may be extended to the moralist, the divine, the
-politician, the orator, the artist, and even the poet. And why so?
-Because wherever an intense activity is given to any one faculty, it
-necessarily prevents the due and natural exercise of others. Hence all
-those professions or pursuits, where the mind is exclusively occupied
-with the ideas of things as they exist in the imagination or
-understanding, as they call for the exercise of intellectual activity,
-and not as they are connected with practical good or evil, must check
-the genial expansion of the moral sentiments and social affections; must
-lead to a cold and dry abstraction, as they are found to suspend the
-animal functions, and relax the bodily frame. Hence the complaint of the
-want of natural sensibility and constitutional warmth of attachment in
-those persons who have been devoted to the pursuit of any art or
-science,—of their restless morbidity of temperament, and indifference to
-every thing that does not furnish an occasion for the display of their
-mental superiority and the gratification of their vanity. The
-philosophical poet himself, perhaps, owes some of his love of nature to
-the opportunity it affords him of analyzing his own feelings, and
-contemplating his own powers,—of making every object about him a whole
-length mirror to reflect his favourite thoughts, and of looking down on
-the frailties of others in undisturbed leisure, and from a more
-dignified height.
-
-One of the most interesting parts of this work is that in which the
-author treats of the French Revolution, and of the feelings connected
-with it, in ingenuous minds, in its commencement and its progress. The
-_solitary_,[60] who, by domestic calamities and disappointments, had
-been cut off from society, and almost from himself, gives the following
-account of the manner in which he was roused from his melancholy:
-
- ‘From that abstraction I was roused—and how?
- Even as a thoughtful shepherd by a flash
- Of lightning, startled in a gloomy cave
- Of these wild hills. For, lo! the dread Bastile,
- With all the chambers in its horrid towers,
- Fell to the ground: by violence o’erthrown
- Of indignation; and with shouts that drowned
- The crash it made in falling! From the wreck
- A golden palace rose, or seemed to rise,
- The appointed seat of equitable law
- And mild paternal sway. The potent shock
- I felt; the transformation I perceived,
- As marvellously seized as in that moment,
- When, from the blind mist issuing, I beheld
- Glory—beyond all glory ever seen,
- Dazzling the soul! Meanwhile prophetic harps
- In every grove were ringing, “War shall cease:
- Did ye not hear that conquest is abjured?
- Bring garlands, bring forth choicest flowers, to deck
- The tree of liberty!”—My heart rebounded:
- My melancholy voice the chorus joined.
- Thus was I reconverted to the world;
- Society became my glittering bride,
- And airy hopes my children. From the depths
- Of natural passion seemingly escaped,
- My soul diffused itself in wide embrace
- Of institutions and the forms of things.
- ——If with noise
- And acclamation, crowds in open air
- Expressed the tumult of their minds, my voice
- There mingled, heard or not. And in still groves,
- Where wild enthusiasts tuned a pensive lay
- Of thanks and expectation, in accord
- With their belief, I sang Saturnian rule
- Returned—a progeny of golden years
- Permitted to descend, and bless mankind.
-
- . . . . .
-
- Scorn and contempt forbid me to proceed!
- But history, time’s slavish scribe, will tell
- How rapidly the zealots of the cause
- Disbanded—or in hostile ranks appeared:
- Some, tired of honest service; these outdone,
- Disgusted, therefore, or appalled by aims
- Of fiercer zealots. So confusion reigned,
- And the more faithful were compelled to exclaim,
- As Brutus did to virtue, “Liberty,
- I worshipped thee, and find thee but a shade!”
- SUCH RECANTATION HAD FOR ME NO CHARM,
- NOR WOULD I BEND TO IT.’
-
-The subject is afterwards resumed, with the same magnanimity and
-philosophical firmness:
-
- ——‘For that other loss,
- The loss of confidence in social man,
- By the unexpected transports of our age
- Carried so high, that every thought which looked
- Beyond the temporal destiny of the kind—
- To many seemed superfluous; as no cause
- For such exalted confidence could e’er
- Exist; so, none is now for such despair.
- The two extremes are equally remote
- From truth and reason; do not, then, confound
- One with the other, but reject them both;
- And choose the middle point, whereon to build
- Sound expectations. This doth he advise
- Who shared at first the illusion. At this day,
- When a Tartarian darkness overspreads
- The groaning nations; when the impious rule,
- By will or by established ordinance,
- Their own dire agents, and constrain the good
- To acts which they abhor; though I bewail
- This triumph, yet the pity of my heart
- Prevents me not from owning that the law,
- By which mankind now suffers, is most just.
- For by superior energies; more strict
- Affiance in each other; faith more firm
- In their unhallowed principles, the bad
- Have fairly earned a victory o’er the weak,
- The vacillating, inconsistent good.’
-
-In the application of these memorable lines, we should, perhaps, differ
-a little from Mr. Wordsworth; nor can we indulge with him in the fond
-conclusion afterwards hinted at, that one day _our_ triumph, the triumph
-of humanity and liberty, may be complete. For this purpose, we think
-several things necessary which are impossible. It is a consummation
-which cannot happen till the nature of things is changed, till the many
-become as united as the _one_, till romantic generosity shall be as
-common as gross selfishness, till reason shall have acquired the
-obstinate blindness of prejudice, till the love of power and of change
-shall no longer goad man on to restless action, till passion and will,
-hope and fear, love and hatred, and the objects proper to excite them,
-that is, alternate good and evil, shall no longer sway the bosoms and
-businesses of men. All things move, not in progress, but in a ceaseless
-round; our strength lies in our weakness; our virtues are built on our
-vices; our faculties are as limited as our being; nor can we lift man
-above his nature more than above the earth he treads. But though we
-cannot weave over again the airy, unsubstantial dream, which reason and
-experience have dispelled,
-
- ‘What though the radiance, which was once so bright,
- Be now for ever taken from our sight,
- Though nothing can bring back the hour
- Of glory in the grass, of splendour in the flower’:—
-
-yet we will never cease, nor be prevented from returning on the wings of
-imagination to that bright dream of our youth; that glad dawn of the
-day-star of liberty; that spring-time of the world, in which the hopes
-and expectations of the human race seemed opening in the same gay career
-with our own; when France called her children to partake her equal
-blessings beneath her laughing skies; when the stranger was met in all
-her villages with dance and festive songs, in celebration of a new and
-golden era; and when, to the retired and contemplative student, the
-prospects of human happiness and glory were seen ascending like the
-steps of Jacob’s ladder, in bright and never-ending succession. The dawn
-of that day was suddenly overcast; that season of hope is past; it is
-fled with the other dreams of our youth, which we cannot recal, but has
-left behind it traces, which are not to be effaced by Birth-day and
-Thanks-giving odes, or the chaunting of _Te Deums_ in all the churches
-of Christendom. To those hopes eternal regrets are due; to those who
-maliciously and wilfully blasted them, in the fear that they might be
-accomplished, we feel no less what we owe—hatred and scorn as lasting!
-
-
- NO. 30.] THE SAME SUBJECT CONTINUED [OCT. 2, 1814.
-
-Mr. Wordsworth’s writings exhibit all the internal power, without the
-external form of poetry. He has scarcely any of the pomp and decoration
-and scenic effect of poetry: no gorgeous palaces nor solemn temples awe
-the imagination; no cities rise ‘with glistering spires and pinnacles
-adorned’; we meet with no knights pricked forth on airy steeds; no
-hair-breadth ‘scapes and perilous accidents by flood or field. Either
-from the predominant habit of his mind not requiring the stimulus of
-outward impressions, or from the want of an imagination teeming with
-various forms, he takes the common every-day events and objects of
-nature, or rather seeks those that are the most simple and barren of
-effect; but he adds to them a weight of interest from the resources of
-his own mind, which makes the most insignificant things serious and even
-formidable. All other interests are absorbed in the deeper interest of
-his own thoughts, and find the same level. His mind magnifies the
-littleness of his subject, and raises its meanness; lends it his
-strength, and clothes it with borrowed grandeur. With him, a mole-hill,
-covered with wild thyme, assumes the importance of ‘the great vision of
-the guarded mount’: a puddle is filled with preternatural faces, and
-agitated with the fiercest storms of passion.
-
-The extreme simplicity which some persons have objected to in Mr.
-Wordsworth’s poetry, is to be found only in the subject and the style:
-the sentiments are subtle and profound. In the latter respect, his
-poetry is as much above the common standard or capacity, as in the other
-it is below it. His poems bear a distant resemblance to some of
-Rembrandt’s landscapes, who, more than any other painter, created the
-medium through which he saw nature, and out of the stump of an old tree,
-a break in the sky, and a bit of water, could produce an effect almost
-miraculous.
-
-Mr. Wordsworth’s poems in general are the history of a refined and
-contemplative mind, conversant only with itself and nature. An intense
-feeling of the associations of this kind is the peculiar and
-characteristic feature of all his productions. He has described the love
-of nature better than any other poet. This sentiment, inly felt in all
-its force, and sometimes carried to an excess, is the source both of his
-strength and of his weakness. However we may sympathise with Mr.
-Wordsworth in his attachment to groves and fields, we cannot extend the
-same admiration to their inhabitants, or to the manners of country life
-in general. We go along with him, while he is the subject of his own
-narrative, but we take leave of him when he makes pedlars and ploughmen
-his heroes and the interpreters of his sentiments. It is, we think,
-getting into low company, and company, besides, that we do not like. We
-take Mr. Wordsworth himself for a great poet, a fine moralist, and a
-deep philosopher; but if he insists on introducing us to a friend of
-his, a parish clerk, or the barber of the village, who is as wise as
-himself, we must be excused if we draw back with some little want of
-cordial faith. We are satisfied with the friendship which subsisted
-between _Parson Adams_ and _Joseph Andrews_. The author himself lets out
-occasional hints that all is not as it should be amongst these northern
-Arcadians. Though, in general, he professes to soften the harsher
-features of rustic vice, he has given us one picture of depraved and
-inveterate selfishness, which we apprehend could only be found among the
-inhabitants of these boasted mountain districts. The account of one of
-his heroines concludes as follows:
-
- ‘A sudden illness seiz’d her in the strength
- Of life’s autumnal season. Shall I tell
- How on her bed of death the matron lay,
- To Providence submissive, so she thought;
- But fretted, vexed, and wrought upon—almost
- To anger, by the malady that griped
- Her prostrate frame with unrelaxing power,
- As the fierce eagle fastens on the lamb.
- She prayed, she moaned—her husband’s sister watched
- Her dreary pillow, waited on her needs;
- And yet the very sound of that kind foot
- Was anguish to her ears! “And must she rule
- Sole mistress of this house when I am gone?
- Sit by my fire—possess what I possessed—
- Tend what I tended—calling it her own!”
- Enough;—I fear too much. Of nobler feeling
- Take this example:—One autumnal evening,
- While she was yet in prime of health and strength,
- I well remember, while I passed her door,
- Musing with loitering step, and upward eye
- Turned tow’rds the planet Jupiter, that hung
- Above the centre of the vale, a voice
- Roused me, her voice;—it said, “That glorious star
- In its untroubled element will shine
- As now it shines, when we are laid in earth,
- And safe from all our sorrows.” She is safe,
- And her uncharitable acts, I trust,
- And harsh unkindnesses, are all forgiven;
- Though, in this vale, remembered with deep awe!’
-
-We think it is pushing our love of the admiration of natural objects a
-good deal too far, to make it a set-off against a story like the
-preceding.
-
-All country people hate each other. They have so little comfort, that
-they envy their neighbours the smallest pleasure or advantage, and
-nearly grudge themselves the necessaries of life. From not being
-accustomed to enjoyment, they become hardened and averse to it—stupid,
-for want of thought—selfish, for want of society. There is nothing good
-to be had in the country, or, if there is, they will not let you have
-it. They had rather injure themselves than oblige any one else. Their
-common mode of life is a system of wretchedness and self-denial, like
-what we read of among barbarous tribes. You live out of the world. You
-cannot get your tea and sugar without sending to the next town for it:
-you pay double, and have it of the worst quality. The small-beer is sure
-to be sour—the milk skimmed—the meat bad, or spoiled in the cooking. You
-cannot do a single thing you like; you cannot walk out or sit at home,
-or write or read, or think or look as if you did, without being subject
-to impertinent curiosity. The apothecary annoys you with his
-complaisance; the parson with his superciliousness. If you are poor, you
-are despised; if you are rich, you are feared and hated. If you do any
-one a favour, the whole neighbourhood is up in arms; the clamour is like
-that of a rookery; and the person himself, it is ten to one, laughs at
-you for your pains, and takes the first opportunity of shewing you that
-he labours under no uneasy sense of obligation. There is a perpetual
-round of mischief-making and backbiting for want of any better
-amusement. There are no shops, no taverns, no theatres, no opera, no
-concerts, no pictures, no public-buildings, no crowded streets, no noise
-of coaches, or of courts of law,—neither courtiers nor courtesans, no
-literary parties, no fashionable routs, no society, no books, or
-knowledge of books. Vanity and luxury are the civilisers of the world,
-and sweeteners of human life. Without objects either of pleasure or
-action, it grows harsh and crabbed: the mind becomes stagnant, the
-affections callous, and the eye dull. Man left to himself soon
-degenerates into a very disagreeable person. Ignorance is always bad
-enough; but rustic ignorance is intolerable. Aristotle has observed,
-that tragedy purifies the affections by terror and pity. If so, a
-company of tragedians should be established at the public expence, in
-every village or hundred, as a better mode of education than either
-Bell’s or Lancaster’s. The benefits of knowledge are never so well
-understood as from seeing the effects of ignorance, in their naked,
-undisguised state, upon the common country people. Their selfishness and
-insensibility are perhaps less owing to the hardships and privations,
-which make them, like people out at sea in a boat, ready to devour one
-another, than to their having no idea of anything beyond themselves and
-their immediate sphere of action. They have no knowledge of, and
-consequently can take no interest in, anything which is not an object of
-their senses, and of their daily pursuits. They hate all strangers, and
-have generally a nickname for the inhabitants of the next village. The
-two young noblemen in Guzman d’Alfarache, who went to visit their
-mistresses only a league out of Madrid, were set upon by the peasants,
-who came round them calling out, ‘_A wolf_.’ Those who have no enlarged
-or liberal ideas, can have no disinterested or generous sentiments.
-Persons who are in the habit of reading novels and romances, are
-compelled to take a deep interest in, and to have their affections
-strongly excited by, fictitious characters and imaginary situations;
-their thoughts and feelings are constantly carried out of themselves, to
-persons they never saw, and things that never existed: history enlarges
-the mind, by familiarising us with the great vicissitudes of human
-affairs, and the catastrophes of states and kingdoms; the study of
-morals accustoms us to refer our actions to a general standard of right
-and wrong; and abstract reasoning, in general, strengthens the love of
-truth, and produces an inflexibility of principle which cannot stoop to
-low trick and cunning. Books, in Lord Bacon’s phrase, are ‘a discipline
-of humanity.’ Country people have none of these advantages, nor any
-others to supply the place of them. Having no circulating libraries to
-exhaust their love of the marvellous, they amuse themselves with
-fancying the disasters and disgraces of their particular acquaintance.
-Having no hump-backed _Richard_ to excite their wonder and abhorrence,
-they make themselves a bugbear of their own, out of the first obnoxious
-person they can lay their hands on. Not having the fictitious distresses
-and gigantic crimes of poetry to stimulate their imagination and their
-passions, they vent their whole stock of spleen, malice, and invention,
-on their friends and next-door neighbours. They get up a little pastoral
-drama at home, with fancied events, but real characters. All their spare
-time is spent in manufacturing and propagating the lie for the day,
-which does its office, and expires. The next day is spent in the same
-manner. It is thus that they embellish the simplicity of rural life! The
-common people in civilised countries are a kind of domesticated savages.
-They have not the wild imagination, the passions, the fierce energies,
-or dreadful vicissitudes of the savage tribes, nor have they the
-leisure, the indolent enjoyments and romantic superstitions, which
-belonged to the pastoral life in milder climates, and more remote
-periods of society. They are taken out of a state of nature, without
-being put in possession of the refinements of art. The customs and
-institutions of society cramp their imaginations without giving them
-knowledge. If the inhabitants of the mountainous districts described by
-Mr. Wordsworth are less gross and sensual than others, they are more
-selfish. Their egotism becomes more concentrated, as they are more
-insulated, and their purposes more inveterate, as they have less
-competition to struggle with. The weight of matter which surrounds them,
-crushes the finer sympathies. Their minds become hard and cold, like the
-rocks which they cultivate. The immensity of their mountains makes the
-human form appear little and insignificant. Men are seen crawling
-between Heaven and earth, like insects to their graves. Nor do they
-regard one another more than flies on a wall. Their physiognomy
-expresses the materialism of their character, which has only one
-principle—rigid self-will. They move on with their eyes and foreheads
-fixed, looking neither to the right nor to the left, with a heavy slouch
-in their gait, and seeming as if nothing would divert them from their
-path. We do not admire this plodding pertinacity, always directed to the
-main chance. There is nothing which excites so little sympathy in our
-minds, as exclusive selfishness. If our theory is wrong, at least it is
-taken from pretty close observation, and is, we think, confirmed by Mr.
-Wordsworth’s own account.
-
-Of the stories contained in the latter part of the volume, we like that
-of the Whig and Jacobite friends, and of the good knight, Sir Alfred
-Irthing, the best. The last reminded us of a fine sketch of a similar
-character in the beautiful poem of _Hart Leap Well_. To conclude,—if the
-skill with which the poet had chosen his materials had been equal to the
-power which he has undeniably exerted over them, if the objects (whether
-persons or things) which he makes use of as the vehicle of his
-sentiments, had been such as to convey them in all their depth and
-force, then the production before us might indeed ‘have proved a
-monument,’ as he himself wishes it, worthy of the author, and of his
-country. Whether, as it is, this very original and powerful performance
-may not rather remain like one of those stupendous but half-finished
-structures, which have been suffered to moulder into decay, because the
-cost and labour attending them exceeded their use or beauty, we feel
-that it would be presumptuous in us to determine.
-
-
- NO. 31.] CHARACTER OF THE LATE MR. PITT[61]
-
-The character of Mr. Pitt was, perhaps, one of the most singular that
-ever existed. With few talents, and fewer virtues, he acquired and
-preserved, in one of the most trying situations, and in spite of all
-opposition, the highest reputation for the possession of every moral
-excellence, and as having carried the attainments of eloquence and
-wisdom as far as human abilities could go. This he did (strange as it
-may appear) by a negation (together with the common virtues) of the
-common vices of human nature, and by the complete negation of every
-other talent that might interfere with the only ones which he possessed
-in a supreme degree, and which, indeed, may be made to include the
-appearance of all others,—an artful use of words, and a certain
-dexterity of logical arrangement. In these alone his power consisted;
-and the defect of all other qualities, which usually constitute
-greatness, contributed to the more complete success of these. Having no
-strong feelings, no distinct perceptions,—his mind having no link, as it
-were, to connect it with the world of external nature, every subject
-presented to him nothing more than a _tabula rasa_, on which he was at
-liberty to lay whatever colouring of language he pleased; having no
-general principles, no comprehensive views of things, no moral habits of
-thinking, no system of action, there was nothing to hinder him from
-pursuing any particular purpose by any means that offered; having never
-any plan, he could not be convicted of inconsistency, and his own pride
-and obstinacy were the only rules of his conduct. Without insight into
-human nature, without sympathy with the passions of men, or apprehension
-of their real designs, he seemed perfectly insensible to the
-consequences of things, and would believe nothing till it actually
-happened. The fog and haze in which he saw every thing communicated
-itself to others; and the total indistinctness and uncertainty of his
-own ideas tended to confound the perceptions of his hearers more
-effectually than the most ingenious misrepresentation could have done.
-Indeed, in defending his conduct, he never seemed to consider himself as
-at all responsible for the success of his measures, or to suppose that
-future events were in our own power; but that, as the best-laid schemes
-might fail, and there was no providing against all possible
-contingencies, this was sufficient excuse for our plunging at once into
-any dangerous or absurd enterprise without the least regard to
-consequences. His reserved logic confined itself solely to the
-_possible_ and the _impossible_, and he appeared to regard the
-_probable_ and _improbable_, the only foundation of moral prudence or
-political wisdom, as beneath the notice of a profound statesman; as if
-the pride of the human intellect were concerned in never entrusting
-itself with subjects, where it may be compelled to acknowledge its
-weakness. Nothing could ever drive him out of his dull forms, and naked
-generalities; which, as they are susceptible neither of degree nor
-variation, are therefore equally applicable to every emergency that can
-happen: and in the most critical aspect of affairs, he saw nothing but
-the same flimsy web of remote possibilities and metaphysical
-uncertainty. In his mind, the wholesome pulp of practical wisdom and
-salutary advice was immediately converted into the dry chaff and husks
-of a miserable logic. From his manner of reasoning, he seemed not to
-have believed that the truth of his statements depended on the reality
-of the facts, but that the facts themselves depended on the order in
-which he arranged them in words: you would not suppose him to be
-agitating a serious question, which had real grounds to go upon, but to
-be declaiming upon an imaginary thesis, proposed as an exercise in the
-schools. He never set himself to examine the force of the objections
-that were brought against him, or attempted to defend his measures upon
-clear, solid grounds of his own; but constantly contented himself with
-first gravely stating the logical form, or dilemma to which the question
-reduced itself; and then, after having declared his opinion, proceeded
-to amuse his hearers by a series of rhetorical common-places, connected
-together in grave, sonorous, and elaborately constructed periods,
-without ever shewing their real application to the subject in dispute.
-Thus, if any member of the opposition disapproved of any measure, and
-enforced his objections by pointing out the many evils with which it was
-fraught, or the difficulties attending its execution, his only answer
-was, ‘that it was true there might be inconveniences attending the
-measure proposed, but we were to remember, that every expedient that
-could be devised might be said to be nothing more than a choice of
-difficulties, and that all that human prudence could do, was to consider
-on which side the advantages lay; that, for his part, he conceived that
-the present measure was attended with more advantages and fewer
-disadvantages than any other that could be adopted; that it we were
-diverted from our object by every appearance of difficulty, the wheels
-of government would be clogged by endless delays and imaginary
-grievances; that most of the objections made to the measure appeared to
-him to be trivial, others of them unfounded and improbable; or that, if
-a scheme, free from all these objections, could be proposed, it might,
-after all, prove inefficient; while, in the meantime, a material object
-remained unprovided for, or the opportunity of action was lost.’ This
-mode of reasoning is admirably described by Hobbes, in speaking of the
-writings of some of the schoolmen, of whom he says that ‘they had
-learned the trick of imposing what they list upon their readers, and
-declining the force of true reason by verbal forks, that is,
-distinctions, which signify nothing, but serve only to astonish the
-multitude of ignorant men.’ That what we have here stated comprehends
-the whole force of his mind, which consisted solely in this evasive
-dexterity and perplexing formality, assisted by a copiousness of words
-and common-place topics, will, we think, be evident to any one who
-carefully looks over his speeches, undazzled by the reputation or
-personal influence of the speaker. It will be in vain to look in them
-for any of the common proofs of human genius or wisdom. He has not left
-behind him a single memorable saying,—not one profound maxim,—one solid
-observation,—one forcible description,—one beautiful thought,—one
-humorous picture,—one affecting sentiment. He has made no addition
-whatever to the stock of human knowledge. He did not possess any one of
-those faculties which contribute to the instruction and delight of
-mankind,—depth of understanding, imagination, sensibility, wit,
-vivacity, clear and solid judgment. But it may be asked, If these
-qualities are not to be found in him, where are we to look for them? and
-we may be required to point out instances of them. We shall answer then,
-that he had none of the abstract, legislative wisdom, refined sagacity,
-or rich, impetuous, high-wrought imagination of Burke; the manly
-eloquence, exact knowledge, vehemence, and natural simplicity of Fox;
-the ease, brilliancy, and acuteness of Sheridan. It is not merely that
-he had not all these qualities in the degree that they were severally
-possessed by his rivals, but he had not any of them in any remarkable
-degree. His reasoning is a technical arrangement of unmeaning
-common-places, his eloquence rhetorical, his style monotonous and
-artificial. If he could pretend to any one excellence more than another,
-it was to taste in composition. There is certainly nothing low, nothing
-puerile, nothing far-fetched or abrupt in his speeches; there is a kind
-of faultless regularity pervading them throughout; but in the confined,
-formal, passive mode of eloquence which he adopted, it seemed rather
-more difficult to commit errors than to avoid them. A man who is
-determined never to move out of the beaten road cannot lose his way.
-However, habit, joined to the peculiar mechanical memory which he
-possessed, carried this correctness to a degree which, in an
-extemporaneous speaker, was almost miraculous; he, perhaps, hardly ever
-uttered a sentence that was not perfectly regular and connected. In this
-respect, he not only had the advantage over his own contemporaries, but
-perhaps no one that ever lived equalled him in this singular faculty.
-But for this, he would always have passed for a common man; and to this
-the constant sameness, and, if we may so say, vulgarity of his ideas,
-must have contributed not a little, as there was nothing to distract his
-mind from this one object of his unintermitted attention; and as, even
-in his choice of words, he never aimed at any thing more than a certain
-general propriety and stately uniformity of style. His talents were
-exactly fitted for the situation in which he was placed; where it was
-his business not to overcome others, but to avoid being overcome. He was
-able to baffle opposition, not from strength or firmness, but from the
-evasive ambiguity and impalpable nature of his resistance, which gave no
-hold to the rude grasp of his opponents: no force could bind the loose
-phantom, and his mind (though ‘not matchless, and his pride humbled by
-such rebuke’) soon rose from defeat unhurt,
-
- ‘And in its liquid texture, mortal wound
- Receiv’d no more than can the fluid air.’
-
-
- NO. 32.] ON RELIGIOUS HYPOCRISY [OCT. 9, 1814.
-
-Religion either makes men wise and virtuous, or it makes them set up
-false pretences to both. In the latter case, it makes them hypocrites to
-themselves as well as others. Religion is, in grosser minds, an enemy to
-self-knowledge. The consciousness of the presence of an all-powerful
-Being, who is both the witness and judge of every thought, word, and
-action, where it does not produce its proper effect, forces the
-religious man to practise every mode of deceit upon himself with respect
-to his real character and motives; for it is only by being wilfully
-blind to his own faults, that he can suppose they will escape the eye of
-Omniscience. Consequently, the whole business of a religious man’s life,
-if it does not conform to the strict line of his duty, may be said to be
-to gloss over his errors to himself, and to invent a thousand shifts and
-palliations, in order to hoodwink the Almighty. While he is sensible of
-his own delinquency, he knows that it cannot escape the penetration of
-his invisible Judge; and the distant penalty annexed to every offence,
-though not sufficient to make him desist from the commission of it, will
-not suffer him to rest easy, till he has made some compromise with his
-own conscience as to his motives for committing it. As far as relates to
-this world, a cunning knave may take a pride in the imposition he
-practises upon others; and, instead of striving to conceal his true
-character from himself, may chuckle with inward satisfaction at the
-folly of those who are not wise enough to detect it. ‘But ’tis not so
-above.’ This shallow, skin-deep hypocrisy will not serve the turn of the
-religious devotee, who is ‘compelled to give in evidence against
-himself,’ and who must first become the dupe of his own imposture,
-before he can flatter himself with the hope of concealment, as children
-hide their eyes with their hands, and fancy that no one can see them.
-Religious people often pray very heartily for the forgiveness of a
-‘multitude of trespasses and sins,’ as a mark of their humility, but we
-never knew them admit any one fault in particular, or acknowledge
-themselves in the wrong in any instance whatever. The natural jealousy
-of self-love is in them heightened by the fear of damnation, and they
-plead _Not Guilty_ to every charge brought against them, with all the
-conscious terrors of a criminal at the bar. It is for this reason that
-the greatest hypocrites in the world are religious hypocrites.
-
-This quality, as it has been sometimes found united with the clerical
-character, is known by the name of _Priestcraft_. The Ministers of
-Religion are perhaps more liable to this vice than any other class of
-people. They are obliged to assume a greater degree of sanctity, though
-they have it not, and to screw themselves up to an unnatural pitch of
-severity and self-denial. They must keep a constant guard over
-themselves, have an eye always to their own persons, never relax in
-their gravity, nor give the least scope to their inclinations. A single
-slip, if discovered, may be fatal to them. Their influence and
-superiority depend on their pretensions to virtue and piety; and they
-are tempted to draw liberally on the funds of credulity and ignorance
-allotted for their convenient support. All this cannot be very friendly
-to downright simplicity of character. Besides, they are so accustomed to
-inveigh against the vices of others, that they naturally forget that
-they have any of their own to correct. They see vice as an object always
-out of themselves, with which they have no other concern than to
-denounce and stigmatise it. They are only reminded of it _in the third
-person_. They as naturally associate sin and its consequences with their
-flocks as a pedagogue associates a false concord and flogging with his
-scholars. If we may so express it, they serve as conductors to the
-lightning of divine indignation, and have only to point the thunders of
-the law at others. They identify themselves with that perfect system of
-faith and morals, of which they are the professed teachers, and regard
-any imputation on their conduct as an indirect attack on the function to
-which they belong, or as compromising the authority under which they
-act. It is only the head of the Popish church who assumes the title of
-_God’s Vicegerent upon Earth_; but the feeling is nearly common to all
-the oracular interpreters of the will of Heaven—from the successor of
-St. Peter down to the simple, unassuming Quaker, who, disclaiming the
-imposing authority of title and office, yet fancies himself the
-immediate organ of a preternatural impulse, and affects to speak only as
-the spirit moves him.
-
-There is another way in which the formal profession of religion aids
-hypocrisy, by erecting a secret tribunal, to which those who affect a
-more than ordinary share of it can (in case of need) appeal from the
-judgments of men. The religious impostor, reduced to his last shift, and
-having no other way left to avoid the most ‘open and apparent shame,’
-rejects the fallible decisions of the world, and thanks God that there
-is one who knows the heart. He is amenable to a higher jurisdiction, and
-while all is well with Heaven, he can pity the errors, and smile at the
-malice of his enemies! Whatever cuts men off from their dependence on
-common opinion or obvious appearances, must open a door to evasion and
-cunning, by setting up a standard of right and wrong in every one’s own
-breast, of the truth of which nobody can judge but the person himself.
-There are some fine instances in the old plays and novels (the best
-commentaries on human nature) of the effect of this principle, in giving
-the last finishing to the character of duplicity. Miss Harris, in
-Fielding’s _Amelia_, is one of the most striking. Molière’s _Tartuffe_
-is another instance of the facility with which religion may be perverted
-to the purposes of the most flagrant hypocrisy. It is an impenetrable
-fastness, to which this worthy person, like so many others, retires
-without the fear of pursuit. It is an additional disguise, in which he
-wraps himself up like a cloak. It is a stalking-horse, which is ready on
-all occasions,—an invisible conscience, which goes about with him,—his
-good genius, that becomes surety for him in all difficulties,—swears to
-the purity of his motives,—extricates him out of the most desperate
-circumstances,—baffles detection, and furnishes a plea to which there is
-no answer.
-
-The same sort of reasoning will account for the old remark, that persons
-who are stigmatised as non-conformists to the established religion,
-Jews, Presbyterians, etc., are more disposed to this vice than their
-neighbours. They are inured to the contempt of the world, and steeled
-against its prejudices: and the same indifference which fortifies them
-against the unjust censures of mankind, may be converted, as occasion
-requires, into a screen for the most pitiful conduct. They have no
-cordial sympathy with others, and, therefore, no sincerity in their
-intercourse with them. It is the necessity of concealment, in the first
-instance, that produces, and is, in some measure, an excuse for, the
-habit of hypocrisy.
-
-Hypocrisy, as it is connected with cowardice, seems to imply weakness of
-body or want of spirit. The impudence and insensibility which belong to
-it, ought to suppose robustness of constitution. There is certainly a
-very successful and formidable class of sturdy, jolly, able-bodied
-hypocrites, the Friar Johns of the profession. Raphael has represented
-Elymas the Sorcerer, with a hard iron visage, and large uncouth figure,
-made up of bones and muscles; as one not troubled with weak nerves or
-idle scruples—as one who repelled all sympathy with others—who was not
-to be jostled out of his course by their censures or suspicions—and who
-could break with ease through the cobweb snares which he had laid for
-the credulity of others, without being once entangled in his own
-delusions. His outward form betrays the hard, unimaginative, self-willed
-understanding of the sorcerer.
-
- A.
-
-
- NO. 33.] ON THE LITERARY CHARACTER [OCT. 28, 1813.
-
-The following remarks are prefixed to the account of Baron Grimm’s
-Correspondence in a late number of a celebrated Journal:-
-
-‘There is nothing more exactly painted in these graphical volumes, than
-the character of M. Grimm himself; and the beauty of it is, that, as
-there is nothing either natural or peculiar about it, it may stand for
-the character of all the wits and philosophers he frequented. He had
-more wit, perhaps, and more sound sense and information, than the
-greatest part of the society in which he lived; but the leading traits
-belong to the whole class, and to all classes, indeed, in similar
-situations, in every part of the world. Whenever there is a very large
-assemblage of persons who have no other occupation but to amuse
-themselves, there will infallibly be generated acuteness of intellect,
-refinement of manners, and good taste in conversation; and, with the
-same certainty, all profound thought, and all serious affection, will be
-discarded from their society.
-
-‘The multitude of persons and things that force themselves on the
-attention in such a scene, and the rapidity with which they succeed each
-other, and pass away, prevent any one from making a deep or permanent
-impression; and the mind, having never been tasked to any course of
-application, and long habituated to this lively succession and variety
-of objects, comes at last to require the excitement of perpetual change,
-and to find a multiplicity of friends as indispensable as a multiplicity
-of amusements. Thus the characteristics of large and polished society
-come almost inevitably to be, wit and heartlessness—acuteness and
-perpetual derision. The same impatience of uniformity, and passion for
-variety, which give so much grace to their conversation, by excluding
-all tediousness and pertinacious wrangling, make them incapable of
-dwelling for many minutes on the feelings and concerns of any one
-individual; while the constant pursuit of little gratifications, and the
-weak dread of all uneasy sensations, render them equally averse from
-serious sympathy and deep thought.
-
-‘The whole style and tone of this publication affords the most striking
-illustration of these general remarks. From one end of it to the other,
-it is a display of the most complete heartlessness, and the most
-uninterrupted levity. It chronicles the deaths of half the author’s
-acquaintance, and makes jests upon them all; and is much more serious in
-discussing the merits of an opera-dancer, than in considering the
-evidence for the being of a God, or the first foundations of morality.
-Nothing, indeed, can be more just or conclusive than the remark that is
-forced from M. Grimm himself, upon the utter carelessness, and instant
-oblivion, that followed the death of one of the most distinguished,
-active, and amiable members of his coterie: “Tant il est vrai que ce que
-nous appelons _la société_, est ce qu’il y a de plus léger, plus ingrat,
-et de plus frivole au monde!”’
-
-These remarks, though shrewd and sensible in themselves, apply rather to
-the character of M. Grimm and his friends as men of the world, after
-their initiation into the refined society of Paris and the great world,
-than as mere men of letters. There is, however, a character which every
-man of letters has before he comes into society, and which he carries
-into the world with him, which we shall here attempt to describe.
-
-The weaknesses and vices that arise from a constant intercourse with
-books, are in certain respects the same with those which arise from
-daily intercourse with the world; yet each has a character and operation
-of its own, which may either counteract or aggravate the tendency of the
-other. The same dissipation of mind, the same listlessness, languor, and
-indifference, may be produced by both, but they are produced in
-different ways, and exhibit very different appearances. The defects of
-the literary character proceed, not from frivolity and voluptuous
-indolence, but from the overstrained exertion of the faculties, from
-abstraction and refinement. A man without talents or education might
-mingle in the same society, might give in to all the gaiety and foppery
-of the age, might see the same ‘multiplicity of persons and things,’ but
-would not become a wit and a philosopher for all that. As far as the
-change of actual objects, the real variety and dissipation goes, there
-is no difference between M. Grimm and a courtier of Francis I.—between
-the consummate philosopher and the giddy girl—between Paris, amidst the
-barbaric refinements of the middle of the eighteenth century, and any
-other metropolis at any other period. It is in the _ideal_ change of
-objects, in the _intellectual_ dissipation of literature and of literary
-society, that we are to seek for the difference. The very same languor
-and listlessness which, in fashionable life, are owing to the rapid
-‘succession of persons and things,’ may be found, and even in a more
-intense degree, in the most recluse student, who has no knowledge
-whatever of the great world, who has never been present at the sallies
-of a _petit souper_, or complimented a lady on presenting her with a
-bouquet. It is the province of literature to anticipate the dissipation
-of real objects, and to increase it. It creates a fictitious
-restlessness and craving after variety, by creating a fictitious world
-around us, and by hurrying us, not only through all the mimic scenes of
-life, but by plunging us into the endless labyrinths of imagination.
-Thus the common indifference produced by the distraction of successive
-amusements, is superseded by a general indifference to surrounding
-objects, to real persons and things, occasioned by the disparity between
-the world of our imagination and that without us. The scenes of real
-life are not got up in the same style of magnificence; they want
-dramatic illusion and effect. The high-wrought feelings require all the
-concomitant and romantic circumstances which fancy can bring together to
-satisfy them, and cannot find them in any given object. M. Grimm was
-not, by his own account, _born_ a lover; but even supposing him to have
-been, in gallantry of temper, a very Amadis, would it have been
-necessary that the enthusiasm of a philosopher and a man of genius
-should have run the gauntlet of all the _bonnes fortunes_ of Paris to
-evaporate into insensibility and indifference? Would not a Clarissa, a
-new Eloise, a Cassandra, or a Berenice, have produced the same
-mortifying effects on a person of his great critical and acumen and
-virtù? Where, O where would he find the rocks of Meillerie in the
-precincts of the Palais Royal, or on what lips would Julia’s kisses
-grow? Who, after wandering with Angelica, or having seen the heavenly
-face of Una, might not meet with impunity a whole circle of literary
-ladies? Cowley’s mistresses reigned by turns in the poet’s fancy, and
-the beauties of King Charles II. perplex the eye in the preference of
-their charms as much now as they ever did. One trifling coquette only
-drives out another; but Raphael’s Galatea kills the whole race of
-pertness and vulgarity at once. After ranging in dizzy mazes, through
-the regions of imaginary beauty, the mind sinks down, breathless and
-exhausted, on the earth. In common minds, indifference is produced by
-mixing with the world. Authors and artists bring it into the world with
-them. The disappointment of the ideal enthusiast is indeed greatest at
-first, and he grows reconciled to his situation by degrees; whereas the
-mere man of the world becomes more dissatisfied and fastidious, and more
-of a misanthrope, the longer he lives.
-
-It is much the same in friendships founded on literary motives. Literary
-men are not attached to the persons of their friends, but to their
-minds. They look upon them in the same light as on the books in their
-library, and read them till they are tired. In casual acquaintances
-friendship grows out of habit. Mutual kindnesses beget mutual
-attachment; and numberless little local occurrences in the course of a
-long intimacy, furnish agreeable topics of recollection, and are almost
-the only sources of conversation among such persons. They have an
-immediate pleasure in each other’s company. But in literature nothing of
-this kind takes place. Petty and local circumstances are beneath the
-dignity of philosophy. Nothing will go down but wit or wisdom. The mind
-is kept in a perpetual state of violent exertion and expectation, and as
-there cannot always be a fresh supply of stimulus to excite it, as the
-same remarks or the same _bon mots_ come to be often repeated, or others
-so like them, that we can easily anticipate the effect, and are no
-longer surprised into admiration, we begin to relax in the frequency of
-our visits, and the heartiness of our welcome. When we are tired of a
-book we can lay it down, but we cannot so easily put our friends on the
-shelf when we grow weary of their society. The necessity of keeping up
-appearances, therefore, adds to the dissatisfaction on both sides, and
-at length irritates indifference into contempt.
-
-By the help of arts and science, everything finds an ideal level. Ideas
-assume the place of realities, and realities sink into nothing. Actual
-events and objects produce little or no effect on the mind, when it has
-been long accustomed to draw its strongest interest from constant
-contemplation. It is necessary that it should, as it were, recollect
-itself—that it should call out its internal resources, and refine upon
-its own feelings—place the object at a distance, and embellish it at
-pleasure. By degrees all things are made to serve as hints, and
-occasions for the exercise of intellectual activity. It was on this
-principle that the sentimental Frenchman left his Mistress, in order
-that he might think of her. Cicero ceased to mourn for the loss of his
-daughter, when he recollected how fine an opportunity it would afford
-him to write an eulogy to her memory; and Mr. Shandy lamented over the
-death of Master Bobby much in the same manner. The insensibility of
-Authors, etc., to domestic and private calamities has been often carried
-to a ludicrous excess, but it is less than it appears to be. The genius
-of philosophy is not yet _quite_ understood. For instance, the man who
-might seem at the moment undisturbed by the death of a wife or mistress,
-would perhaps never walk out on a fine evening as long as he lived,
-without recollecting her; and a disappointment in love that ‘heaves no
-sigh and sheds no tear,’ may penetrate to the heart, and remain fixed
-there ever after. _Hæret lateri lethalis arundo._ The blow is felt only
-by reflection, the rebound is fatal. Our feelings become more ideal; the
-impression of the moment is less violent, but the effect is more general
-and permanent. Those whom we love best, take nearly the same rank in our
-estimation as the heroine of a favourite novel! Indeed, after all,
-compared with the genuine feelings of nature, ‘clad in flesh and blood,’
-with real passions and affections, conversant about real objects, the
-life of a mere man of letters and sentiment appears to be at best but a
-living death; a dim twilight existence: a sort of wandering about in an
-Elysian fields of our own making; a refined, spiritual, disembodied
-state, like that of the ghosts of Homer’s heroes, who, we are told,
-would gladly have exchanged situations with the meanest peasant upon
-earth![62]
-
-The moral character of men of letters depends very much upon the same
-principles. All actions are seen through that general medium which
-reduces them to individual insignificance. Nothing fills or engrosses
-the mind—nothing seems of sufficient importance to interfere with our
-present inclination. Prejudices, as well as attachments, lose their hold
-upon us, and we palter with our duties as we please. Moral obligations,
-by being perpetually refined upon, and discussed, lose their force and
-efficacy, become mere dry distinctions of the understanding,
-
- ‘Play round the head, but never reach the heart.’
-
-Opposite reasons and consequences balance one another, while appetite or
-interest turns the scale. Hence the severe sarcasm of Rousseau, ‘_Tout
-homme reflechi est mechant_.’ In fact, it must be confessed, that, as
-all things produce their extremes, so excessive refinement tends to
-produce equal grossness. The tenuity of our intellectual desires leaves
-a void in the mind which requires to be filled up by coarser
-gratification, and that of the senses is always at hand. They alone
-always retain their strength. There is not a greater mistake than the
-common supposition, that intellectual pleasures are capable of endless
-repetition, and physical ones not so. The one, indeed, may be spread out
-over a greater surface, they may be dwelt upon and kept in mind at will,
-and for that very reason they wear out, and pall by comparison, and
-require perpetual variety. Whereas the physical gratification only
-occupies us at the moment, is, as it were, absorbed in itself, and
-forgotten as soon as it is over, and when it returns is _as good as
-new_. No one could ever read the same book for any length of time
-without being tired of it, but a man is never tired of his meals,
-however little variety his table may have to boast. This reasoning is
-equally true of all persons who have given much of their time to study
-and abstracted speculations. Grossness and sensuality have been marked
-with no less triumph in the religious devotee than in the professed
-philosopher. The perfect joys of heaven do not satisfy the cravings of
-nature; and the good Canon in Gil Blas might be opposed with effect to
-some of the portraits in M. Grimm’s Correspondence.
-
- T. T.
-
-
- NO. 34.] ON COMMON-PLACE CRITICS [NOV. 24, 1816.
-
- ‘Nor can I think what thoughts they can conceive.’
-
-We have already given some account of common-place people; we shall in
-this number attempt a description of another class of the community, who
-may be called (by way of distinction) common-place critics. The former
-are a set of people who have no opinions of their own, and do not
-pretend to have any; the latter are a set of people who have no opinions
-of their own, but who affect to have one upon every subject you can
-mention. The former are a very honest, good sort of people, who are
-contented to pass for what they are; the latter are a very pragmatical,
-troublesome sort of people, who would pass for what they are not, and
-try to put off their common-place notions in all companies and on all
-subjects, as something of their own. They are of both species, the grave
-and the gay; and it is hard to say which is the most tiresome.
-
-A common-place critic has something to say upon every occasion, and he
-always tells you either what is not true, or what you knew before, or
-what is not worth knowing. He is a person who thinks by proxy, and talks
-by rote. He differs with you, not because he thinks you are in the
-wrong, but because he thinks somebody else will think so. Nay, it would
-be well if he stopped here; but he will undertake to misrepresent you by
-anticipation, lest others should misunderstand you, and will set you
-right, not only in opinions which you have, but in those which you may
-be supposed to have. Thus, if you say that _Bottom_ the weaver is a
-character that has not had justice done to it, he shakes his head, is
-afraid you will be thought extravagant, and wonders you should think the
-_Midsummer Night’s Dream_ the finest of all Shakspeare’s plays. He
-judges of matters of taste and reasoning as he does of dress and
-fashion, by the prevailing tone of good company; and you would as soon
-persuade him to give up any sentiment that is current there, as to wear
-the hind part of his coat before. By the best company, of which he is
-perpetually talking, he means persons who live on their own estates, and
-other people’s ideas. By the opinion of the world, to which he pays and
-expects you to pay great deference, he means that of a little circle of
-his own, where he hears and is heard. Again, _good sense_ is a phrase
-constantly in his mouth, by which he does not mean his own sense or that
-of anybody else, but the opinions of a number of persons who have agreed
-to take their opinions on trust from others. If any one observes that
-there is something better than common sense, viz., _uncommon_ sense, he
-thinks this a bad joke. If you object to the opinions of the majority,
-as often arising from ignorance or prejudice, he appeals from them to
-the sensible and well-informed; and if you say there may be other
-persons as sensible and well informed as himself and his friends, he
-smiles at your presumption. If you attempt to prove anything to him, it
-is in vain, for he is not thinking of what you say, but of what will be
-thought of it. The stronger your reasons, the more incorrigible he
-thinks you; and he looks upon any attempt to expose his gratuitous
-assumptions as the wandering of a disordered imagination. His notions
-are like plaster figures cast in a mould, as brittle as they are hollow;
-but they will break before you can make them give way. In fact, he is
-the representative of a large part of the community, the shallow, the
-vain, and indolent, of those who have time to talk, and are not bound to
-think: and he considers any deviation from the select forms of
-common-place, or the accredited language of conventional impertinence,
-as compromising the authority under which he acts in his diplomatic
-capacity. It is wonderful how this class of people agree with one
-another; how they herd together in all their opinions; what a tact they
-have for folly; what an instinct for absurdity; what a sympathy in
-sentiment; how they find one another out by infallible signs, like
-Freemasons! The secret of this unanimity and strict accord is, that not
-any one of them ever admits any opinion that can cost the least effort
-of mind in arriving at, or of courage in declaring it. Folly is as
-consistent with itself as wisdom: there is a certain level of thought
-and sentiment, which the weakest minds, as well as the strongest, find
-out as best adapted to them; and you as regularly come to the same
-conclusions, by looking no farther than the surface, as if you dug to
-the centre of the earth! You know beforehand what a critic of this class
-will say on almost every subject the first time he sees you, the next
-time, the time after that, and so on to the end of the chapter. The
-following list of his opinions may be relied on:—It is pretty certain
-that before you have been in the room with him ten minutes, he will give
-you to understand that Shakspeare was a great but irregular genius.
-Again, he thinks it a question whether any one of his plays, if brought
-out now for the first time, would succeed. He thinks that _Macbeth_
-would be the most likely, from the music which has been since introduced
-into it. He has some doubts as to the superiority of the French School
-over us in tragedy, and observes, that Hume and Adam Smith were both of
-that opinion. He thinks Milton’s pedantry a great blemish in his
-writings, and that _Paradise Lost_ has many prosaic passages in it. He
-conceives that genius does not always imply taste, and that wit and
-judgment are very different faculties. He considers Dr. Johnson as a
-great critic and moralist, and that his Dictionary was a work of
-prodigious erudition and vast industry; but that some of the anecdotes
-of him in Boswell are trifling. He conceives that Mr. Locke was a very
-original and profound thinker. He thinks Gibbon’s style vigorous but
-florid. He wonders that the author of _Junius_ was never found out. He
-thinks Pope’s translation of the _Iliad_ an improvement on the
-simplicity of the original, which was necessary to fit it to the taste
-of modern readers. He thinks there is a great deal of grossness in the
-old comedies; and that there has been a great improvement in the morals
-of the higher classes since the reign of Charles II. He thinks the reign
-of Queen Anne the golden period of our literature, but that, upon the
-whole, we have no English writer equal to Voltaire. He speaks of
-Boccacio as a very licentious writer, and thinks the wit in Rabelais
-quite extravagant, though he never read either of them. He cannot get
-through Spenser’s _Fairy Queen_, and pronounces all allegorical poetry
-tedious. He prefers Smollett to Fielding, and discovers more knowledge
-of the world in _Gil Blas_ than in _Don Quixote_. Richardson he thinks
-very minute and tedious. He thinks the French Revolution has done a
-great deal of harm to the cause of liberty; and blames Buonaparte for
-being so ambitious. He reads the _Edinburgh_ and _Quarterly Reviews_,
-and thinks as they do. He is shy of having an opinion on a new actor or
-a new singer; for the public do not always agree with the newspapers. He
-thinks that the moderns have great advantages over the ancients in many
-respects. He thinks Jeremy Bentham a greater man than Aristotle. He can
-see no reason why artists of the present day should not paint as well as
-Raphael or Titian. For instance, he thinks there is something very
-elegant and classical in Mr. Westall’s drawings. He has no doubt that
-Sir Joshua Reynolds’s Lectures were written by Burke. He considers Horne
-Tooke’s account of the conjunction _That_ very ingenious, and holds that
-no writer can be called elegant who uses the present for the subjunctive
-mood, who says _If it is_ for _If it be_. He thinks Hogarth a great
-master of low, comic humour; and Cobbett a coarse, vulgar writer. He
-often talks of men of liberal education, and men without education, as
-if that made much difference. He judges of people by their pretensions;
-and pays attention to their opinions according to their dress and rank
-in life. If he meets with a fool, he does not find him out; and if he
-meets with any one wiser than himself, he does not know what to make of
-him. He thinks that manners are of great consequence to the common
-intercourse of life. He thinks it difficult to prove the existence of
-any such thing as original genius, or to fix a general standard of
-taste. He does not think it possible to define what wit is. In religion,
-his opinions are liberal. He considers all enthusiasm as a degree of
-madness, particularly to be guarded against by young minds; and believes
-that truth lies in the middle, between the extremes of right and wrong.
-He thinks that the object of poetry is to please; and that astronomy is
-a very pleasing and useful study. He thinks all this, and a great deal
-more, that amounts to nothing. We wonder we have remembered one half of
-it—
-
- ‘For true no-meaning puzzles more than wit.’
-
-Though he has an aversion to all new ideas, he likes all new plans and
-matters-of-fact: the new Schools for All, the Penitentiary, the new
-Bedlam, the new Steam-Boats, the Gas-Lights, the new Patent Blacking;
-every thing of that sort but the Bible Society. The Society for the
-Suppression of Vice he thinks a great nuisance, as every honest man
-must.
-
-In a word, a common-place critic is the pedant of polite conversation.
-He refers to the opinion of Lord M. or Lady G. with the same air of
-significance that the learned pedant does to the authority of Cicero or
-Virgil; retails the wisdom of the day, as the anecdote-monger does the
-wit; and carries about with him the sentiments of people of a certain
-respectability in life, as the dancing-master does their air, or their
-valets their clothes.
-
- Z.
-
-
- NO. 35.] ON THE CATALOGUE RAISONNÉ OF THE [NOV. 10, 1816.
- BRITISH INSTITUTION
-
-The Catalogue Raisonné of the pictures lately exhibited at the British
-Institution is worthy of notice, both as it is understood to be a
-declaration of the views of the Royal Academy, and as it contains some
-erroneous notions with respect to art prevalent in this country. It sets
-out with the following passages:—
-
-‘The first resolution ever framed by the noblemen and gentlemen who met
-to establish the British Institution, consists of the following
-sentence, viz.:
-
-‘“The _object_ of the establishment is to facilitate, by a Public
-Exhibition, the _Sale_ of the productions of _British_ artists.”
-
-‘Now, if the Directors had not felt quite certain as to the result of
-the present Exhibition, (of the Flemish School), if they had not
-perfectly satisfied themselves, that, instead of affording any, even the
-least means of promoting _unfair and invidious comparisons, it would
-produce abundant matter for exaltation to the living Artist_, can we
-possibly imagine they, the foster-parents of British Art, would ever
-have suffered such a display to have taken place? Certainly not. If they
-had not foreseen and fully provided against _all such injurious
-results_, by the deep and masterly manœuvre alluded to in our former
-remarks, is it conceivable that the Directors would have acted in a way
-so counter, so diametrically in opposition to this their fundamental and
-leading principle? No, No! It is a position which all sense of respect
-for their consistency will not suffer us to admit, which all feelings of
-respect for their views forbid us to allow.
-
-‘Is it at all to be wondered at, that, in an Exhibition such as this,
-where nothing _like a patriotic desire_ to uphold the arts of their
-country can possibly have place in the minds of the Directors, we should
-attribute to them the desire of _holding up the old Masters to
-derision_, inasmuch as good policy would allow? Is it to be wondered at,
-that, when the Directors have the three-fold prospect, by so doing, of
-estranging the silly and ignorant Collector from his false and senseless
-infatuation for the _Black Masters_, of turning his _unjust preference_
-from Foreign to British Art, and, by affording the living painters a
-just encouragement, teach them to feel that becoming confidence in their
-powers, which an acknowledgment of their merits entitles them to? Is it
-to be wondered at, we say, that a little duplicity should have been
-practised upon this occasion, that some of our ill-advised Collectors
-and second-rate picture Amateurs should have been singled out as sheep
-for the sacrifice, and _thus ingeniously_ made to pay unwilling homage
-_to the talents of their countrymen_, through that very medium by which
-they had previously been induced _to depreciate them_?’—‘If, in our wish
-to please the Directors, we should, without mercy, damn all that
-deserves damning, and effectually hide our admiration for those pieces
-and passages which are truly entitled to admiration, it must be placed
-entirely to that _patriotic sympathy_, which we feel in common with the
-Directors, of holding up to the public, as the first and great object,
-THE PATRONAGE OF MODERN ART.’
-
-Once more:
-
-‘Who does not perceive (except those whose eyes are not made for seeing
-more than they are told by others) that Vandyke’s portraits, by the
-brilliant colour of the velvet hangings, are made to look as if they had
-been newly fetched home from the clear-starcher, with a double portion
-of blue in their ruffs? Who does not see, that the angelic females in
-Rubens’s pictures (particularly in that of the Brazen Serpent) labour
-under a fit of the bile, twice as severe as they would do, if they were
-not suffering on red velvet? Who does not see, from the same cause, that
-the landscapes by the same Master are converted into _brown studies_,
-and that Rembrandt’s ladies and gentlemen of fashion look as if they had
-been on duty for the whole of last week in the Prince Regent’s new
-sewer? _And who, that has any penetration, that has any gratitude, does
-not see, in seeing all this, the anxious and benevolent solicitude of
-the Directors to keep the old masters under?_’
-
-So, then, this Writer would think it a matter of lively gratitude, and
-of exultation in the breasts of living Artists, if the Directors, ‘in
-their anxious and benevolent desire to keep the old Masters under,’ had
-contrived to make Vandyke’s pictures look like starch and blue: if they
-had converted Rubens’s pictures into brown studies, or a fit of the
-bile; or had dragged Rembrandt’s through the Prince Regent’s new sewers.
-It would have been a great gain, a great triumph to the Academy and to
-the Art, to have nothing left of all the pleasure or admiration which
-those painters had hitherto imparted to the world, to find all the
-excellences which their works had been supposed to possess, and all
-respect for them in the minds of the public destroyed, and converted
-into sudden loathing and disgust. This is, according to the
-Catalogue-writer and his friends, a consummation devoutly to be wished
-for themselves and for the Art. All that is taken from the old Masters
-is so much added to the moderns; the marring of Art is the making of the
-Academy. This is the kind of patronage and promotion of the Fine Arts on
-which he insists as necessary to keep up the reputation of living
-Artists, and to ensure the sale of their works. There is nothing then in
-common between the merits of the old Masters and the doubtful claims of
-the new: _those_ are not ‘the scale by which we can ascend to the love’
-of these. The excellences of the latter are of their own making and of
-their own seeing; we must take their own word for them; and not only so,
-but we must sacrifice all established principles and all established
-reputation to their upstart pretensions, because, if the old pictures
-are not totally worthless, their own can be good for nothing. The only
-chance, therefore, for the moderns, if the Catalogue-writer is to be
-believed, is to decry all the _chef-d’œuvres_ of the Art, and to hold up
-all the great names in it to derision. If the public once get to relish
-the style of the old Masters, they will no longer tolerate theirs. But
-so long as the old Masters can be _kept under_, the coloured caricatures
-of the moderns, like _Mrs. Peachum’s_ coloured handkerchiefs, ‘will be
-of sure sale at their warehouse at Redriff.’ The Catalogue-writer thinks
-it necessary, in order to raise the Art in this country, to depreciate
-all Art in all other times and countries. He thinks that the way to
-excite an enthusiastic admiration of genius in the public is by setting
-the example of a vulgar and malignant hatred of it in himself. He thinks
-to inspire a lofty spirit of emulation in the rising generation, by
-shutting his eyes to the excellences of all the finest models, or by
-pouring out upon them the overflowings of his gall and envy, to
-disfigure them in the eyes of others; so that they may see nothing in
-Raphael, in Titian, in Rubens, in Rembrandt, in Vandyke, in Claude
-Lorraine, in Leonardo da Vinci, but the low wit and dirty imagination of
-a paltry scribbler; and come away from the greatest monuments of human
-capacity, without one feeling of excellence in art, or of beauty or
-grandeur in nature. Nay, he would persuade us that this is a great
-public and private benefit, _viz._, that there is no such thing as
-excellence, as genius, as true fame, except what he and his anonymous
-associates arrogate to themselves, with all the profit and credit of
-this degradation of genius, this ruin of Art, this obloquy and contempt
-heaped on great and unrivalled reputation. He thinks it a likely mode of
-producing confidence in the existence and value of Art, to prove that
-there never was any such thing, till the last annual Exhibition of the
-Royal Academy. He would encourage a disinterested love of Art, and a
-liberal patronage of it in the great and opulent, by shewing that the
-living Artists have no regard, but the most sovereign and reckless
-contempt for it, except as it can be made a temporary stalking-horse to
-their pride and avarice. The writer may have a _patriotic sympathy_ with
-the sale of modern works of Art, but we do not see what sympathy there
-can be between the buyers and sellers of these works, except in the love
-of the Art itself. When we find that these patriotic persons would
-destroy the Art itself to promote the sale of their pictures, we know
-what to say to them. We are obliged to the zeal of our critic for having
-set this matter in so clear a light. The public will feel little
-sympathy with a body of Artists who disclaim all sympathy with all other
-Artists. They will doubt their pretensions to genius who have no feeling
-of respect for it in others; they will consider them as bastards, not
-children of the Art, who would destroy their parent. The public will
-hardly consent, when the proposition is put to them in this tangible
-shape, to give up the cause of liberal art and of every liberal
-sentiment connected with it, and enter, with their eyes open, into a
-pettifogging cabal to keep the old Masters under, or hold their names up
-to derision ‘as good sport,’ merely to gratify the selfish importunity
-of a gang of sturdy beggars, who demand public encouragement and
-support, with a claim of settlement in one hand, and a forged
-certificate of merit in the other. They can only deserve well of the
-public by deserving well of the Art. Have we taken these men from the
-plough, from the counter, from the shop-board, from the tap-room and the
-stable-door, to raise them to fortune, to rank, and distinction in life,
-for the sake of Art, to give them a chance of doing something in Art
-like what had been done before them, of promoting and refining the
-public taste, of setting before them the great models of Art, and by a
-pure love of truth and beauty, and by patient and disinterested
-aspirations after it, of rising to the highest excellence, and of making
-themselves ‘a name great above all names’; and do they now turn round
-upon us, and because they have neglected these high objects of their
-true calling for pitiful cabals and filling their pockets, insist that
-we shall league with them in crushing the progress of Art, and the
-respect attached to all its great efforts? There is no other country in
-the world in which such a piece of impudent quackery could be put
-forward with impunity, and still less in which it could be put forward
-in the garb of patriotism. This is the effect of our gross island
-manners. The Catalogue-writer carries his bear-garden notions of this
-virtue into the Fine Arts, and would set about destroying Dutch or
-Italian pictures as he would Dutch shipping or Italian liberty. He goes
-up to the Rembrandts with the same swaggering Jack-tar airs as he would
-to a battery of nine-pounders, and snaps his fingers at Raphael as he
-would at the French. Yet he talks big about the Elgin Marbles, because
-Mr. Payne Knight has made a slip on that subject; though, to be
-consistent, he ought to be for pounding them in a mortar, should get his
-friend the Incendiary to set fire to the room building for them at the
-British Museum, or should get Mr. Soane to build it. Patriotism and the
-Fine Arts have nothing to do with one another—because patriotism relates
-to exclusive advantages, and the advantages of the Fine Arts are not
-exclusive, but communicable. The physical property of one country cannot
-be shared without loss by another: the physical force of one country may
-destroy that of another. These, therefore, are objects of national
-jealousy and fear of encroachment: for the interests or rights of
-different countries may be compromised in them. But it is not so in the
-Fine Arts, which depend upon taste and knowledge. We do not consume the
-works of Art as articles of food, of clothing, or fuel; but we brood
-over their _idea_, which is accessible to all, and may be multiplied
-without end, ‘with riches fineless.’ Patriotism is ‘beastly; subtle as
-the fox for prey; like warlike as the wolf for what it eats’; but Art is
-ideal, and therefore liberal. The knowledge or perfection of Art in one
-age or country is the cause of its existence or perfection in another.
-Art is the cause of art in other men. Works of genius done by a Dutchman
-are the cause of genius in an Englishman—are the cause of taste in an
-Englishman. The patronage of foreign Art is, not to prevent, but to
-promote Art in England. It does not prevent, but promote taste in
-England. Art subsists by communication, not by exclusion. The light of
-art, like that of nature, shines on all alike; and its benefit, like
-that of the sun, is in being seen and felt. The spirit of art is not the
-spirit of trade: it is not a question between the grower or consumer of
-some perishable and personal commodity: but it is a question between
-human genius and human taste, how much the one can produce for the
-benefit of mankind, and how much the other can enjoy. It is ‘the link of
-peaceful commerce ‘twixt dividable shores.’ To take from it this
-character is to take from it its best privilege, its humanity. Would any
-one, except our Catalogue-virtuoso, think of destroying or concealing
-the monuments of Art in past ages, as inconsistent with the progress of
-taste and civilisation in the present? Would any one find fault with the
-introduction of the works of Raphael into this country, as if their
-being done by an Italian confined the benefit to a foreign country, when
-all the benefit, all the great and lasting benefit, (except the
-purchase-money, the lasting burden of the Catalogue, and the great test
-of the value of Art in the opinion of the writer), is instantly
-communicated to all eyes that behold, and all hearts that can feel them?
-It is many years ago since we first saw the prints of the Cartoons hung
-round the parlour of a little inn on the great north road. We were then
-very young, and had not been initiated into the principles of taste and
-refinement of the _Catalogue Raisonné_. We had heard of the fame of the
-Cartoons, but this was the first time that we had ever been admitted
-face to face into the presence of those divine works. ‘How were we then
-uplifted!’ Prophets and Apostles stood before us, and the Saviour of the
-Christian world, with his attributes of faith and power; miracles were
-working on the walls; the hand of Raphael was there, and as his pencil
-traced the lines, we saw god-like spirits and lofty shapes descend and
-walk visibly the earth, but as if their thoughts still lifted them above
-the earth. There was that figure of St. Paul, pointing with noble
-fervour to ‘temples not made with hands, eternal in the heavens,’ and
-that finer one of Christ in the boat, whose whole figure seems sustained
-by meekness and love, and that of the same person, surrounded by the
-disciples, like a flock of sheep listening to the music of some divine
-shepherd. We knew not how enough to admire them. If from this transport
-and delight there arose in our breasts a wish, a deep aspiration of
-mingled hope and fear, to be able one day to do something like them,
-that hope has long since vanished; but not with it the love of Art, nor
-delight in works of Art, nor admiration of the genius which produces
-them, nor respect for fame which rewards and crowns them! Did we suspect
-that in this feeling of enthusiasm for the works of Raphael we were
-deficient in patriotic sympathy, or that, in spreading it as far as we
-could, we did an injury to our country or to living Art? The very
-feeling shewed that there was no such distinction in Art, that her
-benefits were common, that the power of genius, like the spirit of the
-world, is everywhere alike present. And would the harpies of criticism
-try to extinguish this common benefit to their country from a pretended
-exclusive attachment to their countrymen? Would they rob their country
-of Raphael to set up the credit of their professional little-goes and E.
-O. tables—‘cutpurses of the Art, that from the shelf the precious diadem
-stole, and put it in their pockets’? Tired of exposing such folly, we
-walked out the other day, and saw a bright cloud resting on the bosom of
-the blue expanse, which reminded us of what we had seen in some picture
-in the Louvre. We were suddenly roused from our reverie, by recollecting
-that till we had answered this catchpenny publication we had no right,
-without being liable to a charge of disaffection to our country or
-treachery to the Art, to look at nature, or to think of any thing like
-it in Art, not of British growth and manufacture!
-
-
- NO. 36.] THE SAME SUBJECT CONTINUED [NOV. 10, 17,
- 1816.
-
-The Catalogue-writer nicknames the Flemish painters ‘the Black Masters.’
-Either this means that the works of Rubens and Vandyke were originally
-black pictures, that is, deeply shadowed like those of Rembrandt, which
-is false, there being no painter who used so little shadow as Vandyke,
-or so much colour as Rubens; or it must mean that their pictures have
-turned darker with time, that is, that the art itself is a black art. Is
-this a triumph for the Academy? Is the defect and decay of Art a subject
-of exultation to the national genius? Then there is no hope (in this
-country at least) ‘that a great man’s memory may outlive him half a
-year!’ Do they calculate that the decomposition and gradual
-disappearance of the standard works of Art will quicken the demand, and
-facilitate the sale of modern pictures? Have they no hope of immortality
-themselves, that they are glad to see the inevitable dissolution of all
-that has long flourished in splendour and in honour? They are pleased to
-find, that at the end of near two hundred years, the pictures of Vandyke
-and Rubens have suffered half as much from time as those of their late
-President have done in thirty or forty, or their own in the last ten or
-twelve years. So that the glory of painting is that it does not last for
-ever: it is this which puts the ancients and the moderns on a level.
-They hail with undisguised satisfaction the approaches of the slow
-mouldering hand of time in those works which have lasted longest, not
-anticipating the premature fate of their own. Such is their
-short-sighted ambition. A picture is with them like the frame it is in,
-_as good as new_; and the best picture, that which was last painted.
-They make the weak side of Art the test of its excellence; and though a
-modern picture of two years standing is hardly fit to be seen, from the
-general ignorance of the painter in the mechanical as well as other
-parts of the Art, yet they are sure at any time to get the start of
-Rubens or Vandyke, by painting a picture against the day of exhibition.
-We even question whether they would wish to make their own pictures last
-if they could, and whether they would not destroy their own works as
-well as those of others, (like chalk figures on the floors), to have new
-ones bespoke the next day. The Flemish pictures then, except those of
-Rembrandt, were not originally black; they have not faded in proportion
-to the length of time they have been painted. All that comes then of the
-nickname in the Catalogue is, that the pictures of the old Masters have
-lasted longer than those of the present members of the Royal Academy,
-and that the latter, it is to be presumed, do not wish their works to
-last so long, lest they should be called the _Black Masters_. With
-respect to Rembrandt, this epitaph may be literally true. But, we would
-ask, whether the style of _chiaroscuro_, in which Rembrandt painted, is
-not one fine view of nature and of art? Whether any other painter
-carried it to the same height of perfection as he did? Whether any other
-painter ever joined the same depth of shadow with the same clearness?
-Whether his tones were not as fine as they were true? Whether a more
-thorough master of his art ever lived? Whether he deserved for this to
-be nicknamed by the Writer of the Catalogue, or to have his works ‘kept
-under, or himself held up to derision,’ by the Patrons and Directors of
-the British Institution for the support and encouragement of the Fine
-Arts?
-
-But we have heard it said by a disciple and commentator on the
-Catalogue, (one would think it was hardly possible to descend lower than
-the writer himself), that the Directors of the British Institution
-assume a consequence to themselves, hostile to the pretensions of modern
-professors, out of the reputation of the old Masters, whom they affect
-to look upon with wonder, to worship as something preternatural;—that
-they consider the bare possession of an old picture as a title to
-distinction, and the respect paid to Art as the highest pretension of
-the owner. And is this then a subject of complaint with the Academy,
-that genius is thus thought of, when its claims are once fully
-established? That those high qualities, which are beyond the estimate of
-ignorance and selfishness while living, receive their reward from
-distant ages? Do they not ‘feel the future in the instant’? Do they not
-know, that those qualities which appeal neither to interest nor passion
-can only find their level with time, and would they annihilate the only
-pretensions they have? Or have they no conscious affinity with true
-genius, no claim to the reversion of true fame, no right of succession
-to this lasting inheritance and final reward of great exertions, which
-they would therefore destroy, to prevent others from enjoying it? Does
-all their ambition begin and end in their _patriotic sympathy_ with the
-sale of modern works of Art, and have they no fellow-feeling with the
-hopes and final destiny of human genius? What poet ever complained of
-the respect paid to Homer as derogatory to himself? The envy and
-opposition to established fame is peculiar to the race of modern
-Artists; and it is to be hoped it will remain so. It is the fault of
-their education. It is only by a liberal education that we learn to feel
-respect for the past, or to take an interest in the future. The
-knowledge of Artists is too often confined to their art, and their views
-to their own interest. Even in this they are wrong:—in all respects they
-are wrong. As a mere matter of trade, the prejudice in favour of old
-pictures does not prevent but assist the sale of modern works of Art. If
-there was not a prejudice in favour of old pictures, there could be a
-prejudice in favour of none, and none would be sold. The professors seem
-to think, that for every old picture not sold, one of their own would
-be. This is a false calculation. The contrary is true. For every old
-picture not sold, one of their own (in proportion) would _not_ be sold.
-The practice of buying pictures is a habit, and it must begin with those
-pictures which have a character and name, and not with those which have
-none. ‘Depend upon it,’ says Mr. Burke in a letter to Barry, ‘whatever
-attracts public attention to the Arts, will in the end be for the
-benefit of the Artists themselves.’ Again, do not the Academicians know,
-that it is a contradiction in terms, that a man should enjoy the
-advantages of posthumous fame in his lifetime? Most men cease to be of
-any consequence at all when they are dead; but it is the privilege of
-the man of genius to survive himself. But he cannot in the nature of
-things anticipate this privilege—because in all that appeals to the
-general intellect of mankind, this appeal is strengthened, as it spreads
-wider and is acknowledged; because a man cannot unite in himself
-personally the suffrages of distant ages and nations; because
-popularity, a newspaper puff, cannot have the certainty of lasting fame;
-because it does not carry the same weight of sympathy with it; because
-it cannot have the same interest, the same refinement or grandeur. If
-Mr. West was equal to Raphael, (which he is not), if Mr. Lawrence was
-equal to Vandyke or Titian, (which he is not), if Mr. Turner was equal
-to Claude Lorraine, (which he is not), if Mr. Wilkie was equal to
-Teniers, (which he is not), yet they could not, nor ought they to be
-thought of in the same manner, because there could not be the same proof
-of it, nor the same confidence in the opinion of a man and his friends,
-or of any one generation, as in that of successive generations and the
-voice of posterity. If it is said that we pass over the faults of the
-one, and severely scrutinise the excellences of the other; this is also
-right and necessary, because the one have passed their trial, and the
-others are upon it. If we forgive or overlook the faults of the
-ancients, it is because they have dearly earned it at our hands. We
-ought to have some objects to indulge our enthusiasm upon; and we ought
-to indulge it upon the highest, and those that are surest of deserving
-it. Would one of our Academicians expect us to look at his new house in
-one of the new squares with the same veneration as at Michael Angelo’s,
-which he built with his own hands, as at Tully’s villa, or at the tomb
-of Virgil? We have no doubt they would, but we cannot. Besides, if it
-were possible to transfer our old prejudices to new candidates, the way
-to effect this is not by destroying them. If we have no confidence in
-all that has gone before us, in what has received the sanction of time
-and the concurring testimony of disinterested judges, are we to believe
-all of a sudden that excellence has started up in our own times, because
-it never existed before: are we to take the Artists’ own word for their
-superiority to their predecessors? There is one other plea made by the
-moderns, ‘that they must live,’ and the answer to it is, that they do
-live. An Academician makes his thousand a-year by portrait-painting, and
-complains that the encouragement given to foreign Art deprives him of
-the means of subsistence, and prevents him from indulging his genius in
-works of high history,—‘playing at will his virgin fancies wild.’
-
-As to the comparative merits of the ancients and the moderns, it does
-not admit of a question. The odds are too much in favour of the former,
-because it is likely that more good pictures were painted in the last
-three hundred than in the last thirty years. Now, the old pictures are
-the best remaining out of all that period, setting aside those of living
-Artists. If they are bad, the Art itself is good for nothing; for they
-are the best that ever were. They are not good, because they are old;
-but they have become old, because they are good. The question is not
-between this and any other generation, but between the present and all
-preceding generations, whom the Catalogue-writer, in his misguided zeal,
-undertakes to vilify and ‘to keep under, or hold up to derision.’ To say
-that the great names which have come down to us are not worth any thing,
-is to say that the mountain-tops which we see in the farthest horizon
-are not so high as the intervening objects. If there had been any
-greater painters than Vandyke or Rubens, or Raphael or Rembrandt, or N.
-Poussin or Claude Lorraine, we should have heard of them, we should have
-seen them in the Gallery, and we should have read a patriotic and
-disinterested account of them in the _Catalogue Raisonné_. Waiving the
-unfair and invidious comparison between all former excellence and the
-concentrated essence of it in the present age, let us ask who, in the
-last generation of painters, was equal to the old masters? Was it
-Highmore, or Hayman, or Hudson, or Kneller? Who was the English Raphael,
-or Rubens, or Vandyke, of that day, to whom the Catalogue-critic would
-have extended his patriotic sympathy and damning patronage? Kneller, we
-have been told, was thought superior to Vandyke by the persons of
-fashion whom he painted. So St. Thomas Apostle seems higher than St.
-Paul’s while you are close under it; but the farther off you go the
-higher the mighty dome aspires into the skies. What is become of all
-those great men who flourished in our own time—‘like flowers in men’s
-caps, dying or ere they sicken’—Hoppner, Opie, Shee, Loutherbourg,
-Rigaud, Romney, Barry, the painters of the Shakspeare Gallery? ‘Gone to
-the vault of all the Capulets,’ and their pictures with them, or before
-them! Shall we put more faith in their successors? Shall we take the
-words of their friends for their taste and genius? No, we will stick to
-what we know will stick to us, the ‘heirlooms’ of the Art, the Black
-Masters. The picture, for instance, of Charles I. on horseback, which
-our critic criticises with such heavy drollery, is worth all the
-pictures that were ever exhibited at the Royal Academy (from the time of
-Sir Joshua to the present time inclusive) put together. It shews more
-knowledge and feeling of the Art, more skill and beauty, more sense of
-what it is in objects that gives pleasure to the eye, with more power to
-communicate this pleasure to the world. If either this single picture,
-or all the lumber that has ever appeared at the Academy, were to be
-destroyed, there could not be a question which, with any Artist or with
-any judge or lover of Art. So stands the account between ancient and
-modern Art! By this we may judge of all the rest. The Catalogue-writer
-makes some strictures in the second part on the Waterloo Exhibition,
-which he does not think what it ought to be. We wonder he had another
-word to say on modern Art after seeing it. He should instantly have
-taken the resolution of _Iago_, ‘From this time forth I never will speak
-more.’
-
-The writer of the _Catalogue Raisonné_ has fallen foul of two things
-which ought to be sacred to Artists and lovers of Art—Genius and Fame.
-If they are not sacred to them, we do not know to whom they will be
-sacred. A work such as the present shews that the person who could write
-it must either have no knowledge or taste for Art, or must be actuated
-by a feeling of unaccountable malignity towards it. It shews that any
-body of men by whom it could be set on foot or encouraged are not an
-Academy of Art. It shews that a country in which such a publication
-could make its appearance is not the country of the Fine Arts. Does the
-writer think to prove the genius of his countrymen for Art by
-proclaiming their utter insensibility and flagitious contempt for all
-beauty and excellence in the art, except in their own works? No! it is
-very true that the English are a shopkeeping nation; and the _Catalogue
-Raisonné_ is the proof of it.
-
-Finally, the works of the moderns are not, like those of the Old
-Masters, a second nature. Oh Art, true likeness of nature, ‘balm of hurt
-minds, great nature’s second course, chief nourisher in life’s feast,’
-of what would our Catalogue-mongers deprive us in depriving us of thee
-and of thy glories, of the lasting works of the great Painters, and of
-their names no less magnificent, grateful to our hearts as the sound of
-celestial harmony from other spheres, waking around us (whether heard or
-not) from youth to age, the stay, the guide and anchor of our purest
-thoughts; whom, having once seen, we always remember, and who teach us
-to see all things through them; without whom life would be to begin
-again, and the earth barren; of Raphael, who lifted the human form half
-way to heaven; of Titian, who painted the mind in the face, and unfolded
-the soul of things to the eye; of Rubens, around whose pencil gorgeous
-shapes thronged numberless, startling us by the novel accidents of form
-and colour, putting the spirit of motion into the universe, and weaving
-a gay fantastic round and Bacchanalian dance with nature; of thee, too,
-Rembrandt, who didst redeem one half of nature from obloquy, from the
-nickname in the Catalogue, ‘smoothing the raven down of darkness till it
-smiled,’ and tinging it with a light like streaks of burnished ore; of
-these, and more, of whom the world is scarce worthy; and what would they
-give us in return? Nothing.
-
- W. H.
-
-
- NO. 37.] ON POETICAL VERSATILITY [DEC. 22, 1816.
-
-The spirit of poetry is in itself favourable to humanity and liberty:
-but, we suspect, not when its aid is most wanted. The spirit of poetry
-is not the spirit of mortification or of martyrdom. Poetry dwells in a
-perpetual Utopia of its own, and is for that reason very ill calculated
-to make a Paradise upon earth, by encountering the shocks and
-disappointments of the world. Poetry, like law, is a fiction, only a
-more agreeable one. It does not create difficulties where they do not
-exist; but contrives to get rid of them, whether they exist or not. It
-is not entangled in cobwebs of its own making, but soars above all
-obstacles. It cannot be ‘constrained by mastery.’ It has the range of
-the universe; it traverses the empyrean, and looks down on nature from a
-higher sphere. When it lights upon the earth, it loses some of its
-dignity and its use. Its strength is in its wings; its element the air.
-Standing on its feet, jostling with the crowd, it is liable to be
-overthrown, trampled on, and defaced; for its wings are of a dazzling
-brightness, ‘heaven’s own tinct,’ and the least soil upon them shews to
-disadvantage. Sullied, degraded as we have seen it, we shall not insult
-over it, but leave it to Time to take out the stains, seeing it is a
-thing immortal as itself. ‘Being so majestical, we should do it wrong to
-offer it the show of violence.’ But the best things, in their abuse,
-often become the worst; and so it is with poetry when it is diverted
-from its proper end. Poets live in an ideal world, where they make
-everything out according to their wishes and fancies. They either find
-things delightful or make them so. They feign the beautiful and grand
-out of their own minds, and imagine all things to be, not what they are,
-but what they ought to be. They are naturally inventors, creators of
-truth, of love, and beauty: and while they speak to us from the sacred
-shrine of their own hearts, while they pour out the pure treasures of
-thought to the world, they cannot be too much admired and applauded: but
-when, forgetting their high calling, and becoming tools and puppets in
-the hands of power, they would pass off the gewgaws of corruption and
-love-tokens of self-interest as the gifts of the Muse, they cannot be
-too much despised and shunned. We do not like novels founded on facts,
-nor do we like poets turned courtiers. Poets, it has been said, succeed
-best in fiction: and they should for the most part stick to it.
-Invention, not upon an imaginary subject, is a lie: the varnishing over
-the vices or deformities of actual objects is hypocrisy. Players leave
-their finery at the stage-door, or they would be hooted; poets come out
-into the world with all their bravery on, and yet they would pass for
-_bona fide_ persons. They lend the colours of fancy to whatever they
-see: whatever they touch becomes gold, though it were lead. With them
-every Joan is a lady; and kings and queens are human. Matters of fact
-they embellish at their will, and reason is the plaything of their
-passions, their caprice, or their interest. There is no practice so base
-of which they will not become the panders: no sophistry of which their
-understanding may not be made the voluntary dupe. Their only object is
-to please their fancy. Their souls are effeminate, half man and half
-woman:—they want fortitude, and are without principle. If things do not
-turn out according to their wishes, they will make their wishes turn
-round to things. They can easily overlook whatever they do not like, and
-make an idol of any thing they please. The object of poetry is to
-please: this art naturally gives pleasure, and excites admiration.
-Poets, therefore, cannot do well without sympathy and flattery. It is
-accordingly very much against the grain that they remain long on the
-unpopular side of the question. They do not like to be shut out when
-laurels are to be given away at Court—or places under Government to be
-disposed of, in romantic situations in the country. They are happy to be
-reconciled on the first opportunity to prince and people, and to
-exchange their principles for a pension. They have not always strength
-of mind to think for themselves, nor courage enough to bear the unjust
-stigma of the opinions they have taken upon trust from others. Truth
-alone does not satisfy their pampered appetites without the sauce of
-praise. To prefer truth to all other things, it requires that the mind
-should have been at some pains in finding it out, and that we should
-feel a severe delight in the contemplation of truth, seen by its own
-clear light, and not as it is reflected in the admiring eyes of the
-world. A philosopher may perhaps make a shift to be contented with the
-sober draughts of reason: a poet must have the applause of the world to
-intoxicate him. Milton was, however, a poet, and an honest man; he was
-Cromwell’s secretary.
-
- T. T.
-
-
- NO. 38.] ON ACTORS AND ACTING [JAN. 5, 1817.
-
-Players are ‘the abstracts and brief chronicles of the time’; the motley
-representatives of human nature. They are the only honest hypocrites.
-Their life is a voluntary dream; a studied madness. The height of their
-ambition is to be _beside themselves_. To-day kings, to-morrow beggars,
-it is only when they are themselves, that they are nothing. Made up of
-mimic laughter and tears, passing from the extremes of joy or woe at the
-prompter’s call, they wear the livery of other men’s fortunes; their
-very thoughts are not their own. They are, as it were, train-bearers in
-the pageant of life, and hold a glass up to humanity, frailer than
-itself. We see ourselves at second-hand in them: they shew us all that
-we are, all that we wish to be, and all that we dread to be. The stage
-is an epitome, a bettered likeness of the world, with the dull part left
-out: and, indeed, with this omission, it is nearly big enough to hold
-all the rest. What brings the resemblance nearer is, that, as _they_
-imitate us, we, in our turn, imitate them. How many fine gentlemen do we
-owe to the stage? How many romantic lovers are mere Romeos in
-masquerade? How many soft bosoms have heaved with Juliet’s sighs? They
-teach us when to laugh and when to weep, when to love and when to hate,
-upon principle and with a good grace! Wherever there is a play-house,
-the world will go on not amiss. The stage not only refines the manners,
-but it is the best teacher of morals, for it is the truest and most
-intelligible picture of life. It stamps the image of virtue on the mind
-by first softening the rude materials of which it is composed, by a
-sense of pleasure. It regulates the passions by giving a loose to the
-imagination. It points out the selfish and depraved to our detestation,
-the amiable and generous to our admiration; and if it clothes the more
-seductive vices with the borrowed graces of wit and fancy, even those
-graces operate as a diversion to the coarser poison of experience and
-bad example, and often prevent or carry off the infection by inoculating
-the mind with a certain taste and elegance. To shew how little we agree
-with the common declamations against the immoral tendency of the stage
-on this score, we will hazard a conjecture, that the acting of the
-Beggar’s Opera a certain number of nights every year since it was first
-brought out, has done more towards putting down the practice of highway
-robbery, than all the gibbets that ever were erected. A person, after
-seeing this piece is too deeply imbued with a sense of humanity, is in
-too good humour with himself and the rest of the world, to set about
-cutting throats or rifling pockets. Whatever makes a jest of vice,
-leaves it too much a matter of indifference for any one in his senses to
-rush desperately on his ruin for its sake. We suspect that just the
-contrary effect must be produced by the representation of George
-Barnwell, which is too much in the style of the Ordinary’s sermon to
-meet with any better success. The mind, in such cases, instead of being
-deterred by the alarming consequences held out to it, revolts against
-the denunciation of them as an insult offered to its free-will, and, in
-a spirit of defiance, returns a practical answer to them, by daring the
-worst that can happen. The most striking lesson ever read to levity and
-licentiousness, is in the last act of the Inconstant, where young
-Mirabel is preserved by the fidelity of his mistress, Orinda, in the
-disguise of a page, from the hands of assassins, into whose power he has
-been allured by the temptations of vice and beauty. There never was a
-rake who did not become in imagination a reformed man, during the
-representation of the last trying scenes of this admirable comedy.
-
-If the stage is useful as a school of instruction, it is no less so as a
-source of amusement. It is the source of the greatest enjoyment at the
-time, and a never-failing fund of agreeable reflection afterwards. The
-merits of a new play, or of a new actor, are always among the first
-topics of polite conversation. One way in which public exhibitions
-contribute to refine and humanise mankind, is by supplying them with
-ideas and subjects of conversation and interest in common. The progress
-of civilisation is in proportion to the number of common-places current
-in society. For instance, if we meet with a stranger at an inn or in a
-stage-coach, who knows nothing but his own affairs, his shop, his
-customers, his farm, his pigs, his poultry, we can carry on no
-conversation with him on these local and personal matters: the only way
-is to let him have all the talk to himself. But if he has fortunately
-ever seen Mr. Liston act, this is an immediate topic of mutual
-conversation, and we agree together the rest of the evening in
-discussing the merits of that inimitable actor, with the same
-satisfaction as in talking over the affairs of the most intimate friend.
-
-If the stage thus introduces us familiarly to our contemporaries, it
-also brings us acquainted with former times. It is an interesting
-revival of past ages, manners, opinions, dresses, persons, and
-actions,—whether it carries us back to the wars of York and Lancaster,
-or half way back to the heroic times of Greece and Rome, in some
-translation from the French, or quite back to the age of Charles II. in
-the scenes of Congreve and of Etherege, (the gay Sir George!)—happy age,
-when kings and nobles led purely ornamental lives; when the utmost
-stretch of a morning’s study went no further than the choice of a
-sword-knot, or the adjustment of a side-curl; when the soul spoke out in
-all the pleasing eloquence of dress; and beaux and belles, enamoured of
-themselves in one another’s follies, fluttered like gilded butterflies
-in giddy mazes through the walks of St. James’s Park!
-
-A good company of comedians, a Theatre-Royal judiciously managed, is
-your true Herald’s College; the only Antiquarian Society, that is worth
-a rush. It is for this reason that there is such an air of romance about
-players, and that it is pleasanter to see them, even in their own
-persons, than any of the three learned professions. We feel more respect
-for John Kemble in a plain coat, than for the Lord Chancellor on the
-woolsack. He is surrounded, to our eyes, with a greater number of
-imposing recollections: he is a more reverend piece of formality; a more
-complicated tissue of costume. We do not know whether to look upon this
-accomplished actor as Pierre or King John or Coriolanus or Cato or
-Leontes or the Stranger. But we see in him a stately hieroglyphic of
-humanity; a living monument of departed greatness, a sombre comment on
-the rise and fall of kings. We look after him till he is out of sight,
-as we listen to a story of one of Ossian’s heroes, to ‘a tale of other
-times!’
-
-One of the most affecting things we know is to see a favourite actor
-take leave of the stage. We were present not long ago when Mr. Bannister
-quitted it. We do not wonder that his feelings were overpowered on the
-occasion: ours were nearly so too. We remembered him, in the first
-heyday of our youthful spirits, in the _Prize_, in which he played so
-delightfully with that fine old croaker Suett, and Madame Storace,—in
-the farce of _My Grandmother_, in the _Son-in-Law_, in _Autolycus_, and
-in _Scrub_, in which our satisfaction was at its height. At that time,
-King and Parsons, and Dodd, and Quick, and Edwin were in the full vigour
-of their reputation, who are now all gone. We still feel the vivid
-delight with which we used to see their names in the play-bills, as we
-went along to the Theatre. Bannister was one of the last of these that
-remained; and we parted with him as we should with one of our oldest and
-best friends. The most pleasant feature in the profession of a player,
-and which, indeed, is peculiar to it, is that we not only admire the
-talents of those who adorn it, but we contract a personal intimacy with
-them. There is no class of society whom so many persons regard with
-affection as actors. We greet them on the stage; we like to meet them in
-the streets; they almost always recall to us pleasant associations; and
-we feel our gratitude excited, without the uneasiness of a sense of
-obligation. The very gaiety and popularity, however, which surround the
-life of a favourite performer, make the retiring from it a very serious
-business. It glances a mortifying reflection on the shortness of human
-life, and the vanity of human pleasures. Something reminds us, that ‘all
-the world’s a stage, and all the men and women merely players.’
-
-
- NO. 39.] ON THE SAME [JAN. 5, 1817.
-
-It has been considered as the misfortune of first-rate talents for the
-stage, that they leave no record behind them except that of vague
-rumour, and that the genius of a great actor perishes with him, ‘leaving
-the world no copy.’ This is a misfortune, or at least an unpleasant
-circumstance, to actors; but it is, perhaps, an advantage to the stage.
-It leaves an opening to originality. The stage is always beginning anew;
-the candidates for theatrical reputation are always setting out afresh,
-unencumbered by the affectation of the faults or excellences of their
-predecessors. In this respect, we should imagine that the average
-quantity of dramatic talent remains more nearly the same than that in
-any other walk of art. In no other instance do the complaints of the
-degeneracy of the moderns seem so unfounded as in this; and Colley
-Cibber’s account of the regular decline of the stage, from the time of
-Shakspeare to that of Charles II., and from the time of Charles II. to
-the beginning of George II. appears quite ridiculous. The stage is a
-place where genius is sure to come upon its legs, in a generation or two
-at farthest. In the other arts, (as painting and poetry), it has been
-contended that what has been well done already, by giving rise to
-endless vapid imitations, is an obstacle to what might be done well
-hereafter: that the models or _chef-d’œuvres_ of art, where they are
-accumulated, choke up the path to excellence; and that the works of
-genius, where they can be rendered permanent and handed down from age to
-age, not only prevent, but render superfluous, future productions of the
-same kind. We have not, neither do we want, two Shakspeares, two
-Miltons, two Raphaels, any more than we require two suns in the same
-sphere. Even Miss O’Neill stands a little in the way of our
-recollections of Mrs. Siddons. But Mr. Kean is an excellent substitute
-for the memory of Garrick, whom we never saw. When an author dies, it is
-no matter, for his works remain. When a great actor dies, there is a
-void produced in society, a gap which requires to be filled up. Who does
-not go to see Kean? Who, if Garrick were alive, would go to see him? At
-least one or the other must have quitted the stage. We have seen what a
-ferment has been excited among our living artists by the exhibition of
-the works of the old Masters at the British Gallery. What would the
-actors say to it, if, by any spell or power of necromancy, all the
-celebrated actors, for the last hundred years could be made to appear
-again on the boards of Covent Garden and Drury-Lane, for the last time,
-in all their most brilliant parts? What a rich treat to the town, what a
-feast for the critics, to go and see Betterton, and Booth, and Wilks,
-and Sandford, and Nokes, and Leigh, and Penkethman, and Bullock, and
-Estcourt, and Dogget, and Mrs. Barry, and Mrs. Montfort, and Mrs.
-Oldfield, and Mrs. Bracegirdle, and Mrs. Cibber, and Cibber himself, the
-prince of coxcombs, and Macklin, and Quin, and Rich, and Mrs. Clive, and
-Mrs. Pritchard, and Mrs. Abington, and Weston, and Shuter, and Garrick,
-and all the rest of those who ‘gladdened life, and whose deaths eclipsed
-the gaiety of nations’! We should certainly be there. We should buy a
-ticket for the season. We should enjoy _our hundred days_ again. We
-should not lose a single night. We would not, for a great deal, be
-absent from Betterton’s Hamlet or his Brutus, or from Booth’s Cato, as
-it was first acted to the contending applause of Whigs and Tories. We
-should be in the first row when Mrs. Barry (who was kept by Lord
-Rochester, and with whom Otway was in love) played Monimia or Belvidera;
-and we suppose we should go to see Mrs. Bracegirdle (with whom all the
-world was in love) in all her parts. We should then know exactly whether
-Penkethman’s manner of picking a chicken, and Bullock’s mode of
-devouring asparagus, answered to the ingenious account of them in the
-Tatler; and whether Dogget was equal to Dowton—whether Mrs. Montfort[63]
-or Mrs. Abington was the finest lady—whether Wilks or Cibber was the
-best Sir Harry Wildair—whether Macklin was really ‘the Jew that
-Shakspeare drew,’ and whether Garrick was, upon the whole, so great an
-actor as the world have made him out! Many people have a strong desire
-to pry into the secrets of futurity: for our own parts, we should be
-satisfied if we had the power to recall the dead, and live the past over
-again as often as we pleased! Players, after all, have little reason to
-complain of their hard-earned, short-lived popularity. One thunder of
-applause from pit, boxes, and gallery, is equal to a whole immortality
-of posthumous fame: and when we hear an actor, whose modesty is equal to
-his merit, declare, that he would like to see a dog wag his tail in
-approbation, what must he feel when he sees the whole house in a roar!
-Besides, Fame, as if their reputation had been entrusted to her alone,
-has been particularly careful of the renown of her theatrical
-favourites: she forgets one by one, and year by year, those who have
-been great lawyers, great statesmen, and great warriors in their day;
-but the name of Garrick still survives with the works of Reynolds and of
-Johnson.
-
-Actors have been accused, as a profession, of being extravagant and
-dissipated. While they are said to be so as a piece of common cant, they
-are likely to continue so. But there is a sentence in Shakspeare which
-should be stuck as a label in the mouths of our beadles and whippers-in
-of morality: ‘The web of our life is of a mingled yarn, good and ill
-together: our virtues would be proud if our faults whipped them not: and
-our vices would despair if they were not cherished by our virtues.’ With
-respect to the extravagance of actors, as a traditional character, it is
-not to be wondered at. They live from hand to mouth: they plunge from
-want into luxury; they have no means of making money _breed_, and all
-professions that do not live by turning money into money, or have not a
-certainty of accumulating it in the end by parsimony, spend it.
-Uncertain of the future, they make sure of the present moment. This is
-not unwise. Chilled with poverty, steeped in contempt, they sometimes
-pass into the sunshine of fortune, and are lifted to the very pinnacle
-of public favour; yet even there cannot calculate on the continuance of
-success, but are, ‘like the giddy sailor on the mast, ready with every
-blast to topple down into the fatal bowels of the deep!’ Besides, if the
-young enthusiast, who is smitten with the stage, and with the public as
-a mistress, were naturally a close _hunks_, he would become or remain a
-city clerk, instead of turning player. Again, with respect to the habit
-of convivial indulgence, an actor, to be a good one, must have a great
-spirit of enjoyment in himself, strong impulses, strong passions, and a
-strong sense of pleasure: for it is his business to imitate the
-passions, and to communicate pleasure to others. A man of genius is not
-a machine. The neglected actor may be excused if he drinks oblivion of
-his disappointments; the successful one, if he quaffs the applause of
-the world, and enjoys the friendship of those who are the friends of the
-favourites of fortune, in draughts of nectar. There is no path so steep
-as that of fame: no labour so hard as the pursuit of excellence. The
-intellectual excitement, inseparable from those professions which call
-forth all our sensibility to pleasure and pain, requires some
-corresponding physical excitement to support our failure, and not a
-little to allay the ferment of the spirits attendant on success. If
-there is any tendency to dissipation beyond this in the profession of a
-player, it is owing to the prejudices entertained against them, to that
-spirit of bigotry which in a neighbouring country would deny actors
-Christian burial after their death, and to that cant of criticism,
-which, in our own, slurs over their characters, while living, with a
-half-witted jest.
-
-A London engagement is generally considered by actors as the _ne plus
-ultra_ of their ambition, as ‘a consummation devoutly to be wished,’ as
-the great prize in the lottery of their professional life. But this
-appears to us, who are not in the secret, to be rather the prose
-termination of their adventurous career: it is the provincial
-commencement that is the poetical and truly enviable part of it. After
-that, they have comparatively little to hope or fear. ‘The wine of life
-is drunk, and but the lees remain.’ In London, they become gentlemen,
-and the King’s servants: but it is the romantic mixture of the hero and
-the vagabond that constitutes the essence of the player’s life. It is
-the transition from their real to their assumed characters, from the
-contempt of the world to the applause of the multitude, that gives its
-zest to the latter, and raises them as much above common humanity at
-night, as in the daytime they are depressed below it. ‘Hurried from
-fierce extremes, by contrast made more fierce,’—it is rags and a
-flock-bed which give their splendour to a plume of feathers and a
-throne. We should suppose, that if the most admired actor on the London
-stage were brought to confession on this point, he would acknowledge
-that all the applause he had received from ‘brilliant and overflowing
-audiences,’ was nothing to the light-headed intoxication of unlooked-for
-success in a barn. In town, actors are criticised: in country-places,
-they are wondered at, or hooted at: it is of little consequence which,
-so that the interval is not too long between. For ourselves, we own that
-the description of the strolling player in Gil Blas, soaking his dry
-crusts in the well by the roadside, presents to us a perfect picture of
-human felicity.
-
- W. H.
-
-
- NO. 40.] WHY THE ARTS ARE NOT PROGRESSIVE?—A [JAN. 11, 15;
- FRAGMENT SEP. 11, 1814.
-
-It is often made a subject of complaint and surprise, that the arts in
-this country, and in modern times, have not kept pace with the general
-progress of society and civilisation in other respects, and it has been
-proposed to remedy the deficiency by more carefully availing ourselves
-of the advantages which time and circumstances have placed within our
-reach, but which we have hitherto neglected, the study of the antique,
-the formation of academies, and the distribution of prizes.
-
-First, the complaint itself, that the arts do not attain that
-progressive degree of perfection which might reasonably be expected from
-them, proceeds on a false notion, for the analogy appealed to in support
-of the regular advances of art to higher degrees of excellence, totally
-fails; it applies to science, not to art. Secondly, the expedients
-proposed to remedy the evil by adventitious means are only calculated to
-confirm it. The arts hold immediate communication with nature, and are
-only derived from that source. When that original impulse no longer
-exists, when the inspiration of genius is fled, all the attempts to
-recal it are no better than the tricks of galvanism to restore the dead
-to life. The arts may be said to resemble Antæus in his struggle with
-Hercules, who was strangled when he was raised above the ground, and
-only revived and recovered his strength when he touched his mother
-earth.
-
-Nothing is more contrary to the fact than the supposition that in what
-we understand by the _fine arts_, as painting and poetry, relative
-perfection is only the result of repeated efforts, and that what has
-been once well done constantly leads to something better. What is
-mechanical, reducible to rule, or capable of demonstration, is
-progressive, and admits of gradual improvement: what is not mechanical
-or definite, but depends on genius, taste, and feeling, very soon
-becomes stationary or retrograde, and loses more than it gains by
-transfusion. The contrary opinion is, indeed, a common error, which has
-grown up, like many others, from transferring an analogy of one kind to
-something quite distinct, without thinking of the difference in the
-nature of the things, or attending to the difference of the results. For
-most persons, finding what wonderful advances have been made in biblical
-criticism, in chemistry, in mechanics, in geometry, astronomy,
-etc.—_i.e._, in things depending on mere inquiry and experiment, or on
-absolute demonstration, have been led hastily to conclude, that there
-was a general tendency in the efforts of the human intellect to improve
-by repetition, and in all other arts and institutions to grow perfect
-and mature by time. We look back upon the theological creed of our
-ancestors, and their discoveries in natural philosophy, with a smile of
-pity; science, and the arts connected with it, have all had their
-infancy, their youth, and manhood, and seem to have in them no principle
-of limitation or decay; and, inquiring no farther about the matter, we
-infer, in the height of our self-congratulation, and in the intoxication
-of our pride, that the same progress has been, and will continue to be,
-made in all other things which are the work of man. The fact, however,
-stares us so plainly in the face, that one would think the smallest
-reflection must suggest the truth, and overturn our sanguine theories.
-The greatest poets, the ablest orators, the best painters, and the
-finest sculptors that the world ever saw, appeared soon after the birth
-of these arts, and lived in a state of society which was, in other
-respects, comparatively barbarous. Those arts, which depend on
-individual genius and incommunicable power, have always leaped at once
-from infancy to manhood, from the first rude dawn of invention to their
-meridian height and dazzling lustre, and have in general declined ever
-after. This is the peculiar distinction and privilege of each, of
-science and of art; of the one, never to attain its utmost summit of
-perfection, and of the other, to arrive at it almost at once. Homer,
-Chaucer, Spenser, Shakspeare, Dante, and Ariosto (Milton alone was of a
-later age, and not the worse for it), Raphael, Titian, Michael Angelo,
-Correggio, Cervantes, and Boccaccio—all lived near the beginning of
-their arts—perfected, and all but created them. These giant sons of
-genius stand, indeed, upon the earth, but they tower above their
-fellows, and the long line of their successors does not interpose any
-thing to obstruct their view, or lessen their brightness. In strength
-and stature they are unrivalled, in grace and beauty they have never
-been surpassed. In after-ages, and more refined periods, (as they are
-called), great men have arisen one by one, as it were by throes and at
-intervals: though in general the best of these cultivated and artificial
-minds were of an inferior order, as Tasso and Pope among poets, Guido
-and Vandyke among painters. But in the earliest stages of the arts, when
-the first mechanical difficulties had been got over, and the language as
-it were acquired, they rose by clusters and in constellations, never to
-rise again.
-
-The arts of painting and poetry are conversant with the world of thought
-within us, and with the world of sense without us—with what we know, and
-see, and feel intimately. They flow from the sacred shrine of our own
-breasts, and are kindled at the living lamp of nature. The pulse of the
-passions assuredly beat as high, the depths and soundings of the human
-heart were as well understood three thousand years ago, as they are at
-present; the face of nature and ‘the human face divine,’ shone as bright
-then as they have ever done. It is this light, reflected by true genius
-on art, that marks out its path before it, and sheds a glory round the
-Muses’ feet, like that which ‘circled Una’s angel face,
-
- ‘And made a sunshine in the shady place.’
-
-Nature is the soul of art. There is a strength in the imagination that
-reposes entirely on nature, which nothing else can supply. There is in
-the old poets and painters a vigour and grasp of mind, a full possession
-of their subject, a confidence and firm faith, a sublime simplicity, an
-elevation of thought, proportioned to their depth of feeling, an
-increasing force and impetus, which moves, penetrates, and kindles all
-that comes in contact with it, which seems, not theirs, but given to
-them. It is this reliance on the power of nature which has produced
-those master-pieces by the Prince of Painters, in which expression is
-all in all, where one spirit, that of truth, pervades every part, brings
-down heaven to earth, mingles cardinals and popes with angels and
-apostles, and yet blends and harmonises the whole by the true touches
-and intense feeling of what is beautiful and grand in nature. It was the
-same trust in nature that enabled Chaucer to describe the patient sorrow
-of Griselda; or the delight of that young beauty in the Flower and the
-Leaf, shrouded in her bower, and listening, in the morning of the year,
-to the singing of the nightingale, while her joy rises with the rising
-song, and gushes out afresh at every pause, and is borne along with the
-full tide of pleasure, and still increases and repeats and prolongs
-itself, and knows no ebb. It is thus that Boccaccio, in the divine story
-of the Hawk, has represented Frederigo Alberigi steadily contemplating
-his favourite Falcon (the wreck and remnant of his fortune), and glad to
-see how fat and fair a bird she is, thinking what a dainty repast she
-would make for his Mistress, who had deigned to visit him in his low
-cell. So Isabella mourns over her pot of Basile, and never asks for any
-thing but that. So Lear calls out for his poor fool, and invokes the
-heavens, for they are old like him. So Titian impressed on the
-countenance of that young Neapolitan nobleman in the Louvre, a look that
-never passed away. So Nicolas Poussin describes some shepherds wandering
-out in a morning of the spring, and coming to a tomb with this
-inscription, ‘I ALSO WAS AN ARCADIAN.’
-
-In general, it must happen in the first stages of the Arts, that as none
-but those who had a natural genius for them would attempt to practise
-them, so none but those who had a natural taste for them would pretend
-to judge of or criticise them. This must be an incalculable advantage to
-the man of true genius, for it is no other than the privilege of being
-tried by his peers. In an age when connoisseurship had not become a
-fashion; when religion, war, and intrigue, occupied the time and
-thoughts of the great, only those minds of superior refinement would be
-led to notice the works of art, who had a real sense of their
-excellence; and in giving way to the powerful bent of his own genius,
-the painter was most likely to consult the taste of his judges. He had
-not to deal with pretenders to taste, through vanity, affectation, and
-idleness. He had to appeal to the higher faculties of the soul; to that
-deep and innate sensibility to truth and beauty, which required only a
-proper object to have its enthusiasm excited; and to that independent
-strength of mind, which, in the midst of ignorance and barbarism, hailed
-and fostered genius, wherever it met with it. Titian was patronised by
-Charles V., Count Castiglione was the friend of Raphael. These were true
-patrons, and true critics; and as there were no others, (for the world,
-in general, merely looked on and wondered), there can be little doubt,
-that such a period of dearth of factitious patronage would be the most
-favourable to the full developement of the greatest talents, and the
-attainment of the highest excellence.
-
-The diffusion of taste is not the same thing as the improvement of
-taste; but it is only the former of these objects that is promoted by
-public institutions and other artificial means. The number of candidates
-for fame, and of pretenders to criticism, is thus increased beyond all
-proportion, while the quantity of genius and feeling remains the same;
-with this difference, that the man of genius is lost in the crowd of
-competitors, who would never have become such but from encouragement and
-example; and that the opinion of those few persons whom nature intended
-for judges, is drowned in the noisy suffrages of shallow smatterers in
-taste. The principle of universal suffrage, however applicable to
-matters of government, which concern the common feelings and common
-interests of society, is by no means applicable to matters of taste,
-which can only be decided upon by the most refined understandings. The
-highest efforts of genius, in every walk of art, can never be properly
-understood by the generality of mankind: There are numberless beauties
-and truths which lie far beyond their comprehension. It is only as
-refinement and sublimity are blended with other qualities of a more
-obvious and grosser nature, that they pass current with the world. Taste
-is the highest degree of sensibility, or the impression made on the most
-cultivated and sensible of minds, as genius is the result of the highest
-powers both of feeling and invention. It may be objected, that the
-public taste is capable of gradual improvement, because, in the end, the
-public do justice to works of the greatest merit. This is a mistake. The
-reputation ultimately, and often slowly affixed to works of genius is
-stamped upon them by authority, not by popular consent or the common
-sense of the world. We imagine that the admiration of the works of
-celebrated men has become common, because the admiration of their names
-has become so. But does not every ignorant connoisseur pretend the same
-veneration, and talk with the same vapid assurance of Michael Angelo,
-though he has never seen even a copy of any of his pictures, as if he
-had studied them accurately,—merely because Sir Joshua Reynolds has
-praised him? Is Milton more popular now than when the Paradise Lost was
-first published? Or does he not rather owe his reputation to the
-judgment of a few persons in every successive period, accumulating in
-his favour, and overpowering by its weight the public indifference? Why
-is Shakspeare popular? Not from his refinement of character or
-sentiment, so much as from his power of telling a story, the variety and
-invention, the tragic catastrophe and broad farce of his plays. Spenser
-is not yet understood. Does not Boccaccio pass to this day for a writer
-of ribaldry, because his jests and lascivious tales were all that caught
-the vulgar ear, while the story of the Falcon is forgotten!
-
- W. H.
-
-
- End of THE ROUND TABLE.
-
------
-
-Footnote 30:
-
- It is Steele’s; and the whole paper (No. 95) is in his most delightful
- manner. The dream about the mistress, however, is given to Addison by
- the Editors, and the general style of that number is his; though, from
- the story being related personally of Bickerstaff, who is also
- represented as having been at that time in the army, we conclude it to
- have originally come from Steele, perhaps in the course of
- conversation. The particular incident is much more like a story of his
- than of Addison’s.—H. T.
-
-Footnote 31:
-
- We had in our hands the other day an original copy of the _Tatler_,
- and a list of the subscribers. It is curious to see some names there
- which we should hardly think of, (that of Sir Isaac Newton is among
- them), and also to observe the degree of interest excited by those of
- the different persons, which is not adjusted according to the rules of
- the Heralds’ College.
-
-Footnote 32:
-
- Pope also declares that he had a particular regard for an old post
- which stood in the court-yard before the house where he was brought
- up.
-
-Footnote 33:
-
- See also the passage in his prose works relating to the first design
- of _Paradise Lost_.
-
-Footnote 34:
-
- ‘Oh! for my sake do you with fortune chide,
- The guilty goddess of my harmless deeds,
- That did not better for my life provide,
- Than public means which public manners breeds.
- Thence comes it that my name receives a brand,
- And almost thence my nature is subdued
- To what it works in, like the dyer’s hand.’
-
- At another time, we find him ‘desiring this man’s art, and that man’s
- scope’: so little was Shakspeare, as far as we can learn, enamoured of
- himself!
-
-Footnote 35:
-
- See an Essay on the genius of Hogarth, by C. Lamb, published in a
- periodical work, called the _Reflector_.
-
-Footnote 36:
-
- ‘A good sherris-sack hath a twofold operation in it; it ascends me
- into the brain, dries me there all the foolish, dull, and crudy
- vapours which environ it; and makes it apprehensive, quick, forgetive,
- full of nimble, fiery, and delectable shapes, which, delivered over to
- the tongue, becomes excellent wit,’ etc.—_Second Part of Henry IV._
-
-Footnote 37:
-
- We have an instance in our own times of a man, equally devoid of
- understanding and principle, but who manages the House of Commons by
- his _manner_ alone.
-
-Footnote 38:
-
- Mr. Wordsworth, who has written a sonnet to the King on the good that
- he has done in the last fifty years, has made an attack on a set of
- gipsies for having done nothing in four and twenty hours. ‘The stars
- had gone their rounds, but they had not stirred from their place.’ And
- why should they, if they were comfortable where they were? We did not
- expect this turn from Mr. Wordsworth, whom we had considered as the
- prince of poetical idlers, and patron of the philosophy of indolence,
- who formerly insisted on our spending our time ‘in a wise
- passiveness.’ Mr. W. will excuse us if we are not converts to his
- recantation of his original doctrine; for he who changes his opinion
- loses his authority. We did not look for this Sunday-school philosophy
- from him. What had he himself been doing in these four and twenty
- hours? Had he been admiring a flower, or writing a sonnet? We hate the
- doctrine of utility, even in a philosopher, and much more in a poet:
- for the only real utility is that which leads to enjoyment, and the
- end is, in all cases, better than the means. A friend of ours from the
- North of England proposed to make Stonehenge of some use, by building
- houses with it. Mr. W.’s quarrel with the gipsies is an improvement on
- this extravagance, for the gipsies are the only living monuments of
- the first ages of society. They are an everlasting source of thought
- and reflection on the advantages and disadvantages of the progress of
- civilisation: they are a better answer to the cotton manufactories
- than Mr. W. has given in the _Excursion_. ‘They are a grotesque
- ornament to the civil order.’ We should be sorry to part with Mr.
- Wordsworth’s poetry, because it amuses and interests us: we should be
- still sorrier to part with the tents of our old friends, the Bohemian
- philosophers, because they amuse and interest us more. If any one goes
- a journey, the principal event in it is his meeting with a party of
- gipsies. The pleasantest trait in the character of Sir Roger de
- Coverley, is his interview with the gipsy fortune-teller. This is
- enough.
-
-Footnote 39:
-
- The Dissenters in this country (if we except the founders of sects,
- who fall under a class by themselves) have produced only two
- remarkable men, Priestley and Jonathan Edwards. The work of the latter
- on the Will is written with as much power of logic, and more in the
- true spirit of philosophy, than any other metaphysical work in the
- language. His object throughout is not to perplex the question, but to
- satisfy his own mind and the reader’s. In general, the principle of
- dissent arises more from want of sympathy and imagination, than from
- strength of reason. The spirit of contradiction is not the spirit of
- philosophy.
-
-Footnote 40:
-
- The modern Quakers come as near the mark in these cases as they can.
- They do not go to plays, but they are great attenders of
- spouting-clubs and lectures. They do not frequent concerts, but run
- after pictures. We do not know exactly how they stand with respect to
- the circulating libraries. A Quaker poet would be a literary
- phenomenon.
-
-Footnote 41:
-
- We have made the above observations, not as theological partisans, but
- as natural historians. We shall some time or other give the reverse of
- the picture; for there are vices inherent in establishments and their
- thorough-paced adherents, which well deserve to be distinctly pointed
- out.
-
-Footnote 42:
-
- Is all this a rhodomontade, or literal matter of fact, not credible in
- these degenerate days?
-
-Footnote 43:
-
- One of the most interesting traits of the amiable simplicity of
- Walton, is the circumstance of his friendship for Cotton, one of the
- ‘swash-bucklers’ of the age. Dr. Johnson said there were only three
- works which the reader was sorry to come to the end of, _Don Quixote_,
- _Robinson Crusoe_, and the _Pilgrim’s Progress_. Perhaps Walton’s
- _Angler_ might be added to the number.
-
-Footnote 44:
-
- Oxberry’s manner of acting this character is a very edifying comment
- on the text: he flings his arms about, like those of a figure pulled
- by strings, and seems actuated by a pure spirit of infatuation, as if
- one blast of folly had taken possession of his whole frame,
-
- ‘And filled up all the mighty void of sense.’
-
-Footnote 45:
-
- The following lines are remarkable for a certain cloying sweetness in
- the repetition of the rhymes:
-
- _Titania._ Be kind and courteous to this gentleman;
- Hop in his walks, and gambol in his eyes;
- Feed him with apricocks and dewberries,
- With purple grapes, green figs, and mulberries;
- The honey-bags steal from the humble bees,
- And for night tapers crop their waxen thighs,
- And light them at the fiery glow-worm’s eyes,
- To have my love to bed, and to arise:
- And pluck the wings from painted butterflies,
- To fan the moon beams from his sleeping eyes;’
- Nod to him, elves, and do him courtesies.’
-
-Footnote 46:
-
- The late ingenious Baron Grimm, of acute critical memory, was up to
- the merit of the _Beggar’s Opera_. In his Correspondence, he says, ‘If
- it be true that the nearer a writer is to Nature, the more certain he
- is of pleasing, it must be allowed that the English, in their dramatic
- pieces, have greatly the advantage over us. There reigns in them an
- inestimable tone of nature, which the timidity of our taste has
- banished from French pieces. M. Patu has just published, in two
- volumes, _A selection of smaller dramatic pieces, translated from the
- English_, which will eminently support what I have advanced. The
- principal one among this selection is the celebrated _Beggar’s Opera_
- of Gay, which has had such an amazing run in England. We are here in
- the very worst company imaginable; the _Dramatis Personæ_ are robbers,
- pickpockets, gaolers, prostitutes, and the like; yet we are highly
- amused, and in no haste to quit them; and why? Because there is
- nothing in the world more original or more natural. There is no
- occasion to compare our most celebrated comic operas with this, to see
- how far we are removed from truth and nature, and this is the reason
- that, notwithstanding our wit, we are almost always flat and insipid.
- Two faults are generally committed by our writers, which they seem
- incapable of avoiding. They think they have done wonders if they have
- only faithfully copied the dictionaries of the personages they bring
- upon the stage, forgetting that the great art is to chuse the moments
- of character and passion in those who are to speak, since it is those
- moments alone that render them interesting. For want of this
- discrimination, the piece necessarily sinks into insipidity and
- monotony. Why do almost all M. Vade’s pieces fatigue the audience to
- death? Because all his characters speak the same language; because
- each is a perfect resemblance of the other. Instead of this, in the
- _Beggar’s Opera_, among eight or ten girls of the town, each has her
- separate character, her peculiar traits, her peculiar modes of
- expression, which give her a marked distinction from her
- companions.’—Vol. i. p. 185.
-
-Footnote 47:
-
- He who speaks two languages has no country. The French, when they made
- their language the common language of the Courts of Europe, gained
- more than by all their subsequent conquests.
-
-Footnote 48:
-
- There is, however, in the African physiognomy a grandeur and a force,
- arising from this uniform character of violence and abruptness. It is
- consistent with itself throughout. Entire deformity can only be found
- where the features have not only no symmetry or softness in
- themselves, but have no connection with one another, presenting every
- variety of wretchedness, and a jumble of all sorts of defects, such as
- we see in Hogarth or in the streets of London; for instance, a large
- bottle-nose, with a small mouth twisted awry.
-
-Footnote 49:
-
- The following version, communicated by a classical friend, is exact
- and elegant:
-
- ‘He said; and strait the herald Argicide
- Beneath his feet his winged sandals tied,
- Immortal, golden, that his flight could bear
- O’er seas and lands, like waftage of the air.
- His rod too, that can close the eyes of men
- In balmy sleep, and open them again,
- He took, and holding it in hand, went flying:
- Till, from Pieria’s top the sea descrying,
- Down to it sheer he dropp’d; and scour’d away
- Like the wild gull, that, fishing o’er the bay,
- Flaps on, with pinions dipping in the brine;—
- So went on the far sea the shape divine.’
-
- _Odyssey_, book v.
-
- ——‘That was Arion crown’d:—
- So went he playing on the wat’ry plain.’
-
- _Faerie Queen._
-
- There is a striking description in Mr. Burke’s Reflections of the late
- Queen of France, whose charms had left their poison in the heart of
- this Irish orator and patriot, and set the world in a ferment sixteen
- years afterwards. ‘And surely never lighted on this orb, which she
- hardly seemed to touch, a more delightful vision.’ The idea is in Don
- Quixote, where the Duenna speaks of the air with which the Duchess
- ‘treads, or rather seems to disdain the ground she walks on.’ We have
- heard the same account of the gracefulness of Marie Antoinette from an
- artist, who saw her at Versailles much about the same time that Mr.
- Burke did. He stood in one corner of a little antechamber, and as the
- doors were narrow, she was obliged to pass sideways with her hoop. She
- glided by him in an instant, as if borne on a cloud.
-
-Footnote 50:
-
- In a fruit or flower-piece by Vanhuysum, the minutest details acquire
- a certain grace and beauty from the delicacy with which they are
- finished. The eye dwells with a giddy delight on the liquid drops of
- dew, on the gauze wings of an insect, on the hair and feathers of a
- bird’s nest, the streaked and speckled egg-shells, the fine legs of
- the little travelling caterpillar. Who will suppose that the painter
- had not the same pleasure in detecting these nice distinctions in
- nature, that the critic has in tracing them in the picture?
-
-Footnote 51:
-
- We here allude particularly to Turner, the ablest landscape painter
- now living, whose pictures are, however, too much abstractions of
- aerial perspective, and representations not so properly of the objects
- of nature as of the medium through which they are seen. They are the
- triumph of the knowledge of the artist, and of the power of the pencil
- over the barrenness of the subject. They are pictures of the elements
- of air, earth, and water. The artist delights to go back to the first
- chaos of the world, or to that state of things when the waters were
- separated from the dry land, and light from darkness, but as yet no
- living thing nor tree bearing fruit was seen upon the face of the
- earth. All is ‘without form and void.’ Some one said of his landscapes
- that they were _pictures of nothing, and very like_.
-
-Footnote 52:
-
- Raphael not only could not paint a landscape; he could not paint
- people in a landscape. He could not have painted the heads or the
- figures, or even the dresses, of the St. Peter Martyr. His figures
- have always an _in-door_ look, that is, a set, determined, voluntary,
- dramatic character, arising from their own passions, or a watchfulness
- of those of others, and want that wild uncertainty of expression,
- which is connected with the accidents of nature and the changes of the
- elements. He has nothing _romantic_ about him.
-
-Footnote 53:
-
- A good-natured man will always have a smack of pedantry about him. A
- lawyer, who talks about law, _certioraris_, _noli prosequis_, and silk
- gowns, though he may be a blockhead, is by no means dangerous. It is a
- very bad sign (unless where it arises from singular modesty) when you
- cannot tell a man’s profession from his conversation. Such persons
- either feel no interest in what concerns them most, or do not express
- what they feel. ‘Not to admire any thing’ is a very unsafe rule. A
- London apprentice, who did not admire the Lord Mayor’s coach, would
- stand a good chance of being hanged. We know but one person absurd
- enough to have formed his whole character on the above maxim of
- Horace, and who affects a superiority over others from an uncommon
- degree of natural and artificial stupidity.
-
-Footnote 54:
-
- ‘Je crois que l’imagination étoit la première de ses facultés, et
- qu’elle absorboit même toutes les autres.’—P. 80.
-
-Footnote 55:
-
- ‘Il avoit une grande puissance de raison sur les matieres abstraites,
- sur les objets qui n’ont de réalité que dans la pensée,’ etc.—P. 81.
-
-Footnote 56:
-
- He did more towards the French Revolution than any other man.
- Voltaire, by his wit and penetration, had rendered superstition
- contemptible, and tyranny odious: but it was Rousseau who brought the
- feeling of irreconcilable enmity to rank and privileges, _above
- humanity_, home to the bosom of every man,—identified it with all the
- pride of intellect, and with the deepest yearnings of the human heart.
-
-Footnote 57:
-
- We shall here give one passage as an example, which has always
- appeared to us the very perfection of this kind of personal and local
- description. It is that where he gives an account of his being one of
- the choristers at the Cathedral at Chambery: ‘On jugera bien que la
- vie de la maîtrise toujours chantante et gaie, avec les Musiciens et
- les Enfans de chœur, me plaisoit plus que celle du Séminaire avec les
- Peres de S. Lazare. Cependant, cette vie, pour être plus libre, n’en
- étoit pas moins égale et réglée. J’étois fait pour aimer
- l’indépendance et pour n’en abuser jamais. Durant six mois entiers, je
- ne sortis pas une seule fois, que pour aller chez Maman ou à l’Église,
- et je n’en fus pas même tenté. Cette intervalle est un de ceux où j’ai
- vécu dans le plus grand calme, et que je me suis rappelé avec le plus
- de plaisir. Dans les situations diverses où je me suis trouvé,
- quelques uns out été marqués par un tel sentiment de bien-être, qu’en
- les remémorant j’en suis affecté comme si j’y étois encore. Non
- seulement je me rappelle les tems, les lieux, les personnes, mais tous
- les objets environnans, la température de l’air, son odeur, sa
- couleur, une certaine impression locale qui ne s’est fait sentir que
- là, et dont le souvenir vif m’y transporte de nouveau. Par exemple,
- tout ce qu’on répétait a la maîtrise, tout ce qu’on chantoit au chœur,
- tout ce qu’on y faisoit, le bel et noble habit des Chanoines, les
- hasubles des Prêtres, les mitres des Chantres, la figure des
- Musiciens, un vieux Charpentier boiteux qui jouoit de la contrebasse,
- un petit Abbé biondin qui jouoit du violon, le lambeau de soutane
- qu’après avoir posé son épée, M. le Maître endossoit par-dessus son
- habit laïque, et le beau surplis fin dont il en couvrait les loques
- pour aller au chœur; l’orgueil avec lequel j’allois, tenant ma petite
- flûte à bec, m’établir dans l’orchestre, à la tribune, pour un petit
- bout de récit que M. le Maître avoit fait exprès pour moi: le bon
- diner qui nous attendoit ensuite, le bon appétit qu’on y portoit:—ce
- concours d’objets vivement retracé m’a cent fois charmé dans ma
- mémoire, autant et plus que dans la realité. J’ai gardé toujours une
- affection tendre pour un certain air du _Conditor alme syderum_ qui
- marche par iambes; parce qu’un Dimanche de l’Avent j’entendis de mon
- lit chanter cette hymne, avant le jour, sur le perron de la
- Cathédrale, selon un rite de cette eglise là. Mlle. _Merceret_, femme
- de chambre de Maman, savoit un peu de musique; je n’oublierai jamais
- un petit motet _afferte_, que M. le Maître me fit chanter avec elle,
- et que sa maîtresse écoutait avec tant de plaisir. Enfin tout, jusqu’à
- la bonne servante _Perrine_, qui étoit si bonne fille, et que les
- enfans de chœur faisoient tant endêver—tout dans les souvenirs de ces
- tems de bonheur et d’innocence revient souvent me ravir et
- m’attrister.’—_Confessions_, LIV. iii. p. 283.
-
-Footnote 58:
-
- Burns, when about to sail for America after the first publication of
- his poems, consoled himself with ‘the delicious thought of being
- regarded as a clever fellow, though on the other side of the
- Atlantic.’
-
-Footnote 59:
-
- This man (Burke) who was a half poet and a half philosopher, has done
- more mischief than perhaps any other person in the world. His
- understanding was not competent to the discovery of any truth, but it
- was sufficient to palliate a falsehood; his reasons, of little weight
- in themselves, thrown into the scale of power, were dreadful. Without
- genius to adorn the beautiful, he had the art to throw a dazzling veil
- over the deformed and disgusting; and to strew the flowers of
- imagination over the rotten carcass of corruption, not to prevent, but
- to communicate the infection. His jealousy of Rousseau was one chief
- cause of his opposition to the French Revolution. The writings of the
- one had changed the institutions of a kingdom; while the speeches of
- the other, with the intrigues of his whole party, had changed nothing
- but the _turnspit of the King’s kitchen_. He would have blotted out
- the broad pure light of Heaven, because it did not first shine in at
- the little Gothic windows of St. Stephen’s Chapel. The genius of
- Rousseau had levelled the towers of the Bastile with the dust; our
- zealous reformist, who would rather be doing mischief than nothing,
- tried, therefore, to patch them up again, by calling that loathsome
- dungeon the King’s castle, and by fulsome adulation of the virtues of
- a Court strumpet. This man,—but enough of him here.
-
-Footnote 60:
-
- This word is not English.
-
-Footnote 61:
-
- Written in 1806.
-
-Footnote 62:
-
- Plato’s cave, in which he supposes a man to be shut up all his life
- with his back to the light, and to see nothing of the figures of men,
- or other objects that pass by, but their shadows on the opposite wall
- of his cell, so that when he is let out and sees the real figures, he
- is only dazzled and confounded by them, seems an ingenious satire on
- the life of a book-worm.
-
-Footnote 63:
-
- The following lively description of this actress is given by Cibber in
- his Apology:—
-
- ‘What found most employment for her whole various excellence at once,
- was the part of Melantha, in Marriage-à-la-mode. Melantha is as
- finished an impertinent as ever fluttered in a drawing-room, and seems
- to contain the most complete system of female foppery that could
- possibly be crowded into the tortured form of a fine lady. Her
- language, dress, motion, manners, soul, and body, are in a continual
- hurry to be something more than is necessary or commendable. And
- though I doubt it will be a vain labour to offer you a just likeness
- of Mrs. Montfort’s action, yet the fantastic impression is still so
- strong in my memory, that I cannot help saying something, though
- fantastically, about it. The first ridiculous airs that break from her
- are upon a gallant never seen before, who delivers her a letter from
- her father, recommending him to her good graces as an honourable
- lover. Here now, one would think she might naturally shew a little of
- the sex’s decent reserve, though never so slightly covered! No, sir;
- not a tittle of it; modesty is the virtue of a poor-soul’d country
- gentlewoman: she is too much a court-lady, to be under so vulgar a
- confusion: she reads the letter, therefore, with a careless, dropping
- lip, and an erected brow, humming it hastily over, as if she were
- impatient to outgo her father’s commands, by making a complete
- conquest of him at once: and that the letter might not embarrass her
- attack, crack! she crumbles it at once into her palm, and pours upon
- him her whole artillery of airs, eyes, and motion; down goes her
- dainty, diving body to the ground, as if she were sinking under the
- conscious load of her own attractions; then launches into a flood of
- fine language and compliment, still playing her chest forward in fifty
- falls and risings, like a swan upon waving water; and, to complete her
- impertinence, she is so rapidly fond of her own wit, that she will not
- give her lover leave to praise it: Silent assenting bows, and vain
- endeavours to speak, are all the share of the conversation he is
- admitted to, which at last he is relieved from, by her engagement to
- half a score visits, which she _swims_ from him to make, with a
- promise to return in a twinkling.’—_The Life of Colley Cibber_, p.
- 138.
-
-
-
-
- CHARACTERS OF SHAKESPEAR’S PLAYS
-
-
- BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
-
-The first edition of the _Characters of Shakespear’s Plays_ (5½ in. × 9
-in.) was published in 1817. The imprint reads thus:—London: | Printed by
-C. H. Reynell, 21, Piccadilly, | for R. Hunter, successor to Mr.
-Johnson, | in St. Paul’s Church-yard; | and C. and J. Ollier, |
-Welbeck-street, Cavendish-square. | 1817. The second edition was issued
-in the following year, and the imprint is:—London: | Printed for Taylor
-and Hessey, | 93, Fleet Street. | 1818. There are several verbal
-alterations in the second edition, and one curious _erratum_: ‘In
-_Lear_, p. 173 [p. 269 present edition] dele line “Not an hour more nor
-less.’” In the text of the play these words occur between ‘Fourscore and
-upward’ and ‘And, to deal plainly.’ The second edition also was printed
-by C. H. Reynell, Broad-street, Golden-square. No further edition was
-published in Hazlitt’s lifetime, and the present issue has consequently
-been printed from a copy of the second edition: the proofs, however,
-have been read with a copy of the first edition, and one or two
-misprints thereby corrected. In 1818 a pirated American edition was
-published at Boston.
-
-A contemporary criticism of the volume may be found in the _Edinburgh
-Review_, 1817, by Francis Jeffrey. See also E. L. Bulwer’s _Some
-Thoughts on the Genius of Hazlitt_. One hundred pounds was paid to
-Hazlitt by C. H. Reynell for the copyright, and the first edition, at
-half a guinea, was sold in six weeks: an adverse criticism by William
-Gifford in the _Quarterly Review_ (No. 36, January 1818) spoiled the
-sale of the second edition.
-
-The following announcement appears on the back of the half-title of the
-second edition:—‘This day is published, Lectures on the English Poets,
-delivered at the Surry Institution, By William Hazlitt. In one vol. 8vo.
-price 10s. 6d.’
-
-
-
-
- TO
-
- CHARLES LAMB, ESQ.
-
- THIS VOLUME IS INSCRIBED, AS A MARK OF
-
- OLD FRIENDSHIP
-
- AND LASTING ESTEEM,
-
- BY THE AUTHOR.
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
- PAGE
-
- Preface 171
-
- Cymbeline 179
-
- Macbeth 186
-
- Julius Cæsar 195
-
- Othello 200
-
- Timon of Athens 210
-
- Coriolanus 214
-
- Troilus and Cressida 221
-
- Antony and Cleopatra 228
-
- Hamlet 232
-
- The Tempest 238
-
- The Midsummer Night’s Dream 244
-
- Romeo and Juliet 248
-
- Lear 257
-
- Richard II. 272
-
- Henry IV. in Two Parts 277
-
- Henry V. 285
-
- Henry VI. in Three Parts 292
-
- Richard III. 298
-
- Henry VIII. 303
-
- King John 306
-
- Twelfth Night; or, What You Will 313
-
- The Two Gentlemen of Verona 318
-
- The Merchant of Venice 320
-
- The Winter’s Tale 324
-
- All’s Well that Ends Well 329
-
- Love’s Labour’s Lost 332
-
- Much Ado About Nothing 335
-
- As You Like It 338
-
- The Taming of the Shrew 341
-
- Measure for Measure 345
-
- The Merry Wives of Windsor 349
-
- The Comedy of Errors 351
-
- Doubtful Plays of Shakespear 353
-
- Poems and Sonnets 357
-
-
- PREFACE
-
-It is observed by Mr. Pope, that
-
- ‘If ever any author deserved the name of an _original_, it was
- Shakespear. Homer himself drew not his art so immediately from the
- fountains of nature; it proceeded through Ægyptian strainers and
- channels, and came to him not without some tincture of the learning,
- or some cast of the models, of those before him. The poetry of
- Shakespear was inspiration indeed: he is not so much an imitator, as
- an instrument of nature; and it is not so just to say that he speaks
- from her, as that she speaks through him.
-
- ‘His _characters_ are so much nature herself, that it is a sort of
- injury to call them by so distant a name as copies of her. Those of
- other poets have a constant resemblance, which shows that they
- received them from one another, and were but multipliers of the same
- image: each picture, like a mock-rainbow, is but the reflection of a
- reflection. But every single character in Shakespear, is as much an
- individual, as those in life itself; it is as impossible to find any
- two alike; and such, as from their relation or affinity in any
- respect appear most to be twins, will, upon comparison, be found
- remarkably distinct. To this life and variety of character, we must
- add the wonderful preservation of it; which is such throughout his
- plays, that had all the speeches been printed without the very names
- of the persons, I believe one might have applied them with certainty
- to every speaker.’
-
-The object of the volume here offered to the public, is to illustrate
-these remarks in a more particular manner by a reference to each play. A
-gentleman of the name of Mason, the author of a Treatise on Ornamental
-Gardening (not Mason the poet), began a work of a similar kind about
-forty years ago, but he only lived to finish a parallel between the
-characters of Macbeth and Richard III. which is an exceedingly ingenious
-piece of analytical criticism. Richardson’s Essays include but a few of
-Shakespear’s principal characters. The only work which seemed to
-supersede the necessity of an attempt like the present was Schlegel’s
-very admirable Lectures on the Drama, which give by far the best account
-of the plays of Shakespear that has hitherto appeared. The only
-circumstances in which it was thought not impossible to improve on the
-manner in which the German critic has executed this part of his design,
-were in avoiding an appearance of mysticism in his style, not very
-attractive to the English reader, and in bringing illustrations from
-particular passages of the plays themselves, of which Schlegel’s work,
-from the extensiveness of his plan, did not admit. We will at the same
-time confess, that some little jealousy of the character of the national
-understanding was not without its share in producing the following
-undertaking, for ‘we were piqued’ that it should be reserved for a
-foreign critic to give ‘reasons for the faith which we English have in
-Shakespear.’ Certainly no writer among ourselves has shown either the
-same enthusiastic admiration of his genius, or the same philosophical
-acuteness in pointing out his characteristic excellences. As we have
-pretty well exhausted all we had to say upon this subject in the body of
-the work, we shall here transcribe Schlegel’s general account of
-Shakespear, which is in the following words:—
-
- ‘Never, perhaps, was there so comprehensive a talent for the
- delineation of character as Shakespear’s. It not only grasps the
- diversities of rank, sex, and age, down to the dawnings of infancy;
- not only do the king and the beggar, the hero and the pickpocket,
- the sage and the idiot speak and act with equal truth; not only does
- he transport himself to distant ages and foreign nations, and
- pourtray in the most accurate manner, with only a few apparent
- violations of costume, the spirit of the ancient Romans, of the
- French in their wars with the English, of the English themselves
- during a great part of their history, of the Southern Europeans (in
- the serious part of many comedies) the cultivated society of that
- time, and the former rude and barbarous state of the North; his
- human characters have not only such depth and precision that they
- cannot be arranged under classes, and are inexhaustible, even in
- conception:—no—this Prometheus not merely forms men, he opens the
- gates of the magical world of spirits; calls up the midnight ghost;
- exhibits before us his witches amidst their unhallowed mysteries;
- peoples the air with sportive fairies and sylphs:—and these beings,
- existing only in imagination, possess such truth and consistency,
- that even when deformed monsters like Caliban, he extorts the
- conviction, that if there should be such beings, they would so
- conduct themselves. In a word, as he carries with him the most
- fruitful and daring fancy into the kingdom of nature,—on the other
- hand, he carries nature into the regions of fancy, lying beyond the
- confines of reality. We are lost in astonishment at seeing the
- extraordinary, the wonderful, and the unheard of, in such intimate
- nearness.
-
- ‘If Shakespear deserves our admiration for his characters, he is
- equally deserving of it for his exhibition of passion, taking this
- word in its widest signification, as including every mental
- condition, every tone from indifference or familiar mirth to the
- wildest rage and despair. He gives us the history of minds; he lays
- open to us, in a single word, a whole series of preceding
- conditions. His passions do not at first stand displayed to us in
- all their height, as is the case with so many tragic poets, who, in
- the language of Lessing, are thorough masters of the legal style of
- love. He paints, in a most inimitable manner, the gradual progress
- from the first origin. “He gives,” as Lessing says, “a living
- picture of all the most minute and secret artifices by which a
- feeling steals into our souls; of all the imperceptible advantages
- which it there gains; of all the stratagems by which every other
- passion is made subservient to it, till it becomes the sole tyrant
- of our desires and our aversions.” Of all poets, perhaps, he alone
- has pourtrayed the mental diseases,—melancholy, delirium,
- lunacy,—with such inexpressible, and, in every respect, definite
- truth, that the physician may enrich his observations from them in
- the same manner as from real cases.
-
- ‘And yet Johnson has objected to Shakespear, that his pathos is not
- always natural and free from affectation. There are, it is true,
- passages, though, comparatively speaking, very few, where his poetry
- exceeds the bounds of true dialogue, where a too soaring
- imagination, a too luxuriant wit, rendered the complete dramatic
- forgetfulness of himself impossible. With this exception, the
- censure originates only in a fanciless way of thinking, to which
- everything appears unnatural that does not suit its own tame
- insipidity. Hence, an idea has been formed of simple and natural
- pathos, which consists in exclamations destitute of imagery, and
- nowise elevated above every-day life. But energetical passions
- electrify the whole of the mental powers, and will, consequently, in
- highly favoured natures, express themselves in an ingenious and
- figurative manner. It has been often remarked, that indignation
- gives wit; and, as despair occasionally breaks out into laughter, it
- may sometimes also give vent to itself in antithetical comparisons.
-
- ‘Besides, the rights of the poetical form have not been duly
- weighed. Shakespear, who was always sure of his object, to move in a
- sufficiently powerful manner when he wished to do so, has
- occasionally, by indulging in a freer play, purposely moderated the
- impressions when too painful, and immediately introduced a musical
- alleviation of our sympathy. He had not those rude ideas of his art
- which many moderns seem to have, as if the poet, like the clown in
- the proverb, must strike twice on the same place. An ancient
- rhetorician delivered a caution against dwelling too long on the
- excitation of pity; for nothing, he said, dries so soon as tears;
- and Shakespear acted conformably to this ingenious maxim, without
- knowing it.
-
- ‘The objection, that Shakespear wounds our feelings by the open
- display of the most disgusting moral odiousness, harrows up the mind
- unmercifully, and tortures even our senses by the exhibition of the
- most insupportable and hateful spectacles, is one of much greater
- importance. He has never, in fact, varnished over wild and
- bloodthirsty passions with a pleasing exterior,—never clothed crime
- and want of principle with a false show of greatness of soul; and in
- that respect he is every way deserving of praise. Twice he has
- pourtrayed downright villains; and the masterly way in which he has
- contrived to elude impressions of too painful a nature, may be seen
- in Iago and Richard the Third. The constant reference to a petty and
- puny race must cripple the boldness of the poet. Fortunately for his
- art, Shakespear lived in an age extremely susceptible of noble and
- tender impressions, but which had still enough of the firmness
- inherited from a vigorous olden time not to shrink back with dismay
- from every strong and violent picture. We have lived to see
- tragedies of which the catastrophe consists in the swoon of an
- enamoured princess. If Shakespear falls occasionally into the
- opposite extreme, it is a noble error, originating in the fulness of
- a gigantic strength: and yet this tragical Titan, who storms the
- heavens, and threatens to tear the world from off its hinges; who,
- more terrible than Æschylus, makes our hair stand on end, and
- congeals our blood with horror, possessed, at the same time, the
- insinuating loveliness of the sweetest poetry. He plays with love
- like a child; and his songs are breathed out like melting sighs. He
- unites in his genius the utmost elevation and the utmost depth; and
- the most foreign, and even apparently irreconcileable properties
- subsist in him peaceably together. The world of spirits and nature
- have laid all their treasures at his feet. In strength a demi-god,
- in profundity of view a prophet, in all-seeing wisdom a protecting
- spirit of a higher order, he lowers himself to mortals, as if
- unconscious of his superiority: and is as open and unassuming as a
- child.
-
- ‘Shakespear’s comic talent is equally wonderful with that which he
- has shown in the pathetic and tragic: it stands on an equal
- elevation, and possesses equal extent and profundity. All that I
- before wished was, not to admit that the former preponderated. He is
- highly inventive in comic situations and motives. It will be hardly
- possible to show whence he has taken any of them; whereas, in the
- serious part of his drama, he has generally laid hold of something
- already known. His comic characters are equally true, various, and
- profound, with his serious. So little is he disposed to caricature,
- that we may rather say many of his traits are almost too nice and
- delicate for the stage, that they can only be properly seized by a
- great actor, and fully understood by a very acute audience. Not only
- has he delineated many kinds of folly; he has also contrived to
- exhibit mere stupidity in a most diverting and entertaining
- manner.’—Vol. ii. p. 145.
-
-We have the rather availed ourselves of this testimony of a foreign
-critic in behalf of Shakespear, because our own countryman, Dr. Johnson,
-has not been so favourable to him. It may be said of Shakespear, that
-‘those who are not for him are against him’: for indifference is here
-the height of injustice. We may sometimes, in order ‘to do a great
-right, do a little wrong.’ An overstrained enthusiasm is more pardonable
-with respect to Shakespear than the want of it; for our admiration
-cannot easily surpass his genius. We have a high respect for Dr.
-Johnson’s character and understanding, mixed with something like
-personal attachment: but he was neither a poet nor a judge of poetry. He
-might in one sense be a judge of poetry as it falls within the limits
-and rules of prose, but not as it is poetry. Least of all was he
-qualified to be a judge of Shakespear, who ‘alone is high fantastical.’
-Let those who have a prejudice against Johnson read Boswell’s Life of
-him; as those whom he has prejudiced against Shakespear should read his
-Irene. We do not say that a man to be a critic must necessarily be a
-poet: but to be a good critic, he ought not to be a bad poet. Such
-poetry as a man deliberately writes, such, and such only will he like.
-Dr. Johnson’s Preface to his edition of Shakespear looks like a
-laborious attempt to bury the characteristic merits of his author under
-a load of cumbrous phraseology, and to weigh his excellences and defects
-in equal scales, stuffed full of ‘swelling figures and sonorous
-epithets.’ Nor could it well be otherwise; Dr. Johnson’s general powers
-of reasoning overlaid his critical susceptibility. All his ideas were
-cast in a given mould, in a set form: they were made out by rule and
-system, by climax, inference, and antithesis:—Shakespear’s were the
-reverse. Johnson’s understanding dealt only in round numbers: the
-fractions were lost upon him. He reduced everything to the common
-standard of conventional propriety; and the most exquisite refinement or
-sublimity produced an effect on his mind, only as they could be
-translated into the language of measured prose. To him an excess of
-beauty was a fault; for it appeared to him like an excrescence; and his
-imagination was dazzled by the blaze of light. His writings neither
-shone with the beams of native genius, nor reflected them. The shifting
-shapes of fancy, the rainbow hues of things, made no impression on him:
-he seized only on the permanent and tangible. He had no idea of natural
-objects but ‘such as he could measure with a two-foot rule, or tell upon
-ten fingers’: he judged of human nature in the same way, by mood and
-figure: he saw only the definite, the positive, and the practical, the
-average forms of things, not their striking differences—their classes,
-not their degrees. He was a man of strong common sense and practical
-wisdom, rather than of genius or feeling. He retained the regular,
-habitual impressions of actual objects, but he could not follow the
-rapid flights of fancy, or the strong movements of passion. That is, he
-was to the poet what the painter of still life is to the painter of
-history. Common sense sympathises with the impressions of things on
-ordinary minds in ordinary circumstances: genius catches the glancing
-combinations presented to the eye of fancy, under the influence of
-passion. It is the province of the didactic reasoner to take cognizance
-of those results of human nature which are constantly repeated and
-always the same, which follow one another in regular succession, which
-are acted upon by large classes of men, and embodied in received
-customs, laws, language, and institutions; and it was in arranging,
-comparing, and arguing on these kind of general results, that Johnson’s
-excellence lay. But he could not quit his hold of the common-place and
-mechanical, and apply the general rule to the particular exception, or
-shew how the nature of man was modified by the workings of passion, or
-the infinite fluctuations of thought and accident. Hence he could judge
-neither of the heights nor depths of poetry. Nor is this all; for being
-conscious of great powers in himself, and those powers of an adverse
-tendency to those of his author, he would be for setting up a foreign
-jurisdiction over poetry, and making criticism a kind of Procrustes’ bed
-of genius, where he might cut down imagination to matter-of-fact,
-regulate the passions according to reason, and translate the whole into
-logical diagrams and rhetorical declamation. Thus he says of
-Shakespear’s characters, in contradiction to what Pope had observed, and
-to what every one else feels, that each character is a species, instead
-of being an individual. He in fact found the general species or
-_didactic_ form in Shakespear’s characters, which was all he sought or
-cared for; he did not find the individual traits, or the _dramatic_
-distinctions which Shakespear has engrafted on this general nature,
-because he felt no interest in them. Shakespear’s bold and happy flights
-of imagination were equally thrown away upon our author. He was not only
-without any particular fineness of organic sensibility, alive to all the
-‘mighty world of ear and eye,’ which is necessary to the painter or
-musician, but without that intenseness of passion, which, seeking to
-exaggerate whatever excites the feelings of pleasure or power in the
-mind, and moulding the impressions of natural objects according to the
-impulses of imagination, produces a genius and a taste for poetry.
-According to Dr. Johnson, a mountain is sublime, or a rose is beautiful;
-for that their name and definition imply. But he would no more be able
-to give the description of Dover cliff in _Lear_, or the description of
-flowers in _The Winter’s Tale_, than to describe the objects of a sixth
-sense; nor do we think he would have any very profound feeling of the
-beauty of the passages here referred to. A stately common-place, such as
-Congreve’s description of a ruin in the _Mourning Bride_, would have
-answered Johnson’s purpose just as well, or better than the first; and
-an indiscriminate profusion of scents and hues would have interfered
-less with the ordinary routine of his imagination than Perdita’s lines,
-which seem enamoured of their own sweetness—
-
- ——‘Daffodils
- That come before the swallow dares, and take
- The winds of March with beauty; violets dim,
- But sweeter than the lids of Juno’s eyes,
- Or Cytherea’s breath.’—
-
-No one who does not feel the passion which these objects inspire can go
-along with the imagination which seeks to express that passion and the
-uneasy sense of delight accompanying it by something still more
-beautiful, and no one can feel this passionate love of nature without
-quick natural sensibility. To a mere literal and formal apprehension,
-the inimitably characteristic epithet, ‘violets _dim_,’ must seem to
-imply a defect, rather than a beauty; and to any one, not feeling the
-full force of that epithet, which suggests an image like ‘the sleepy eye
-of love,’ the allusion to ‘the lids of Juno’s eyes’ must appear
-extravagant and unmeaning. Shakespear’s fancy lent words and images to
-the most refined sensibility to nature, struggling for expression: his
-descriptions are identical with the things themselves, seen through the
-fine medium of passion: strip them of that connection, and try them by
-ordinary conceptions and ordinary rules, and they are as grotesque and
-barbarous as you please!—By thus lowering Shakespear’s genius to the
-standard of common-place invention, it was easy to show that his faults
-were as great as his beauties; for the excellence, which consists merely
-in a conformity to rules, is counterbalanced by the technical violation
-of them. Another circumstance which led to Dr. Johnson’s indiscriminate
-praise or censure of Shakespear, is the very structure of his style.
-Johnson wrote a kind of rhyming prose, in which he was as much compelled
-to finish the different clauses of his sentences, and to balance one
-period against another, as the writer of heroic verse is to keep to
-lines of ten syllables with similar terminations. He no sooner
-acknowledges the merits of his author in one line than the periodical
-revolution of his style carries the weight of his opinion completely
-over to the side of objection, thus keeping up a perpetual alternation
-of perfections and absurdities. We do not otherwise know how to account
-for such assertions as the following:—
-
- ‘In his tragic scenes, there is always something wanting, but his
- comedy often surpasses expectation or desire. His comedy pleases by
- the thoughts and the language, and his tragedy, for the greater
- part, by incident and action. His tragedy seems to be skill, his
- comedy to be instinct.’
-
-Yet after saying that ‘his tragedy was skill,’ he affirms in the next
-page,
-
- ‘His declamations or set speeches are commonly cold and weak, _for
- his power was the power of nature_: when he endeavoured, like other
- tragic writers, to catch opportunities of amplification, and instead
- of inquiring what the occasion demanded, to shew how much his stores
- of knowledge could supply, he seldom escapes without the pity or
- resentment of his reader.’
-
-Poor Shakespear! Between the charges here brought against him, of want
-of nature in the first instance, and of want of skill in the second, he
-could hardly escape being condemned. And again,
-
- ‘But the admirers of this great poet have most reason to complain
- when he approaches nearest to his highest excellence, and seems
- fully resolved to sink them in dejection, or mollify them with
- tender emotions by the fall of greatness, the danger of innocence,
- or the crosses of love. What he does best, he soon ceases to do. He
- no sooner begins to move than he counteracts himself; and terror and
- pity, as they are rising in the mind, are checked and blasted by
- sudden frigidity.’
-
-In all this, our critic seems more bent on maintaining the equilibrium
-of his style than the consistency or truth of his opinions.—If Dr.
-Johnson’s opinion was right, the following observations on Shakespear’s
-Plays must be greatly exaggerated, if not ridiculous. If he was wrong,
-what has been said may perhaps account for his being so, without
-detracting from his ability and judgment in other things.
-
-It is proper to add, that the account of the _Midsummer’s Night’s Dream_
-has appeared in another work.[64]
-
- _April 15, 1817._
-
-
-
-
- CHARACTERS OF SHAKESPEAR’S PLAYS
-
-
- CYMBELINE
-
-CYMBELINE is one of the most delightful of Shakespear’s historical
-plays. It may be considered as a dramatic romance, in which the most
-striking parts of the story are thrown into the form of a dialogue, and
-the intermediate circumstances are explained by the different speakers,
-as occasion renders it necessary. The action is less concentrated in
-consequence; but the interest becomes more aerial and refined from the
-principle of perspective introduced into the subject by the imaginary
-changes of scene, as well as by the length of time it occupies. The
-reading of this play is like going a journey with some uncertain object
-at the end of it, and in which the suspense is kept up and heightened by
-the long intervals between each action. Though the events are scattered
-over such an extent of surface, and relate to such a variety of
-characters, yet the links which bind the different interests of the
-story together are never entirely broken. The most straggling and
-seemingly casual incidents are contrived in such a manner as to lead at
-last to the most complete developement of the catastrophe. The ease and
-conscious unconcern with which this is effected only makes the skill
-more wonderful. The business of the plot evidently thickens in the last
-act: the story moves forward with increasing rapidity at every step; its
-various ramifications are drawn from the most distant points to the same
-centre; the principal characters are brought together, and placed in
-very critical situations; and the fate of almost every person in the
-drama is made to depend on the solution of a single circumstance—the
-answer of Iachimo to the question of Imogen respecting the obtaining of
-the ring from Posthumus. Dr. Johnson is of opinion that Shakespear was
-generally inattentive to the winding-up of his plots. We think the
-contrary is true; and we might cite in proof of this remark not only the
-present play, but the conclusion of _Lear_, of _Romeo and Juliet_, of
-_Macbeth_, of _Othello_, even of _Hamlet_, and of other plays of less
-moment, in which the last act is crowded with decisive events brought
-about by natural and striking means.
-
-The pathos in CYMBELINE is not violent or tragical, but of the most
-pleasing and amiable kind. A certain tender gloom overspreads the whole.
-Posthumus is the ostensible hero of the piece, but its greatest charm is
-the character of Imogen. Posthumus is only interesting from the interest
-she takes in him; and she is only interesting herself from her
-tenderness and constancy to her husband. It is the peculiar excellence
-of Shakespear’s heroines, that they seem to exist only in their
-attachment to others. They are pure abstractions of the affections. We
-think as little of their persons as they do themselves, because we are
-let into the secrets of their hearts, which are more important. We are
-too much interested in their affairs to stop to look at their faces,
-except by stealth and at intervals. No one ever hit the true perfection
-of the female character, the sense of weakness leaning on the strength
-of its affections for support, so well as Shakespear—no one ever so well
-painted natural tenderness free from affectation and disguise—no one
-else ever so well shewed how delicacy and timidity, when driven to
-extremity, grow romantic and extravagant; for the romance of his
-heroines (in which they abound) is only an excess of the habitual
-prejudices of their sex, scrupulous of being false to their vows, truant
-to their affections, and taught by the force of feeling when to forego
-the forms of propriety for the essence of it. His women were in this
-respect exquisite logicians; for there is nothing so logical as passion.
-They knew their own minds exactly; and only followed up a favourite
-purpose, which they had sworn to with their tongues, and which was
-engraven on their hearts, into its untoward consequences. They were the
-prettiest little set of martyrs and confessors on record.—Cibber, in
-speaking of the early English stage, accounts for the want of prominence
-and theatrical display in Shakespear’s female characters from the
-circumstance, that women in those days were not allowed to play the
-parts of women, which made it necessary to keep them a good deal in the
-back-ground. Does not this state of manners itself, which prevented
-their exhibiting themselves in public, and confined them to the
-relations and charities of domestic life, afford a truer explanation of
-the matter? His women are certainly very unlike stage-heroines; the
-reverse of tragedy-queens.
-
-We have almost as great an affection for Imogen as she had for
-Posthumus; and she deserves it better. Of all Shakespear’s women she is
-perhaps the most tender and the most artless. Her incredulity in the
-opening scene with Iachimo, as to her husband’s infidelity, is much the
-same as Desdemona’s backwardness to believe Othello’s jealousy. Her
-answer to the most distressing part of the picture is only, ‘My lord, I
-fear, has forgot Britain.’ Her readiness to pardon Iachimo’s false
-imputations and his designs against herself, is a good lesson to prudes;
-and may shew that where there is a real attachment to virtue, it has no
-need to bolster itself up with an outrageous or affected antipathy to
-vice. The scene in which Pisanio gives Imogen his master’s letter,
-accusing her of incontinency on the treacherous suggestions of Iachimo,
-is as touching as it is possible for anything to be:—
-
- ‘_Pisanio._ What cheer, Madam?
-
- _Imogen._ False to his bed! What is it to be false?
- To lie in watch there, and to think on him?
- To weep ‘twixt clock and clock? If sleep charge nature,
- To break it with a fearful dream of him,
- And cry myself awake? That’s false to ‘s bed, is it?
-
- _Pisanio._ Alas, good lady!
-
- _Imogen._ I false? thy conscience witness, Iachimo,
- Thou didst accuse him of incontinency,
- Thou then look’dst like a villain: now methinks,
- Thy favour’s good enough. Some Jay of Italy,
- Whose mother was her painting, hath betray’d him:
- Poor I am stale, a garment out of fashion,
- And for I am richer than to hang by th’ walls,
- I must be ript; to pieces with me. Oh,
- Men’s vows are women’s traitors. All good seeming
- By thy revolt, oh husband, shall be thought
- Put on for villainy: not born where ‘t grows,
- But worn a bait for ladies.
-
- _Pisanio._ Good Madam, hear me—
-
- _Imogen._ Talk thy tongue weary, speak:
- I have heard I am a strumpet, and mine ear,
- Therein false struck, can take no greater wound,
- Nor tent to bottom that.’——
-
-When Pisanio, who had been charged to kill his mistress, puts her in a
-way to live, she says,
-
- ‘Why, good fellow,
- What shall I do the while? Where bide? How live?
- Or in my life what comfort, when I am
- Dead to my husband?’
-
-Yet when he advises her to disguise herself in boy’s clothes, and
-suggests ‘a course pretty and full in view,’ by which she may ‘happily
-be near the residence of Posthumus,’ she exclaims—
-
- ‘Oh, for such means,
- Though peril to my modesty, not death on ‘t,
- I would adventure.’
-
-And when Pisanio, enlarging on the consequences, tells her she must
-change
-
- ——‘Fear and niceness,
- The handmaids of all women, or more truly,
- Woman its pretty self, into a waggish courage,
- Ready in gibes, quick-answer’d, saucy, and
- As quarrellous as the weazel’——
-
-she interrupts him hastily—
-
- ‘Nay, be brief;
- I see into thy end, and am almost
- A man already.’
-
-In her journey thus disguised to Milford-Haven, she loses her guide and
-her way; and unbosoming her complaints, says beautifully—
-
- ——‘My dear lord,
- Thou art one of the false ones; now I think on thee,
- My hunger’s gone; but even before, I was
- At point to sink for food.’
-
-She afterwards finds, as she thinks, the dead body of Posthumus, and
-engages herself as a footboy to serve a Roman officer, when she has done
-all due obsequies to him whom she calls her former master—
-
- ——‘And when
- With wild wood-leaves and weeds I ha’ strew’d his grave,
- And on it said a century of pray’rs,
- Such as I can, twice o’er, I ‘ll weep and sigh,
- And leaving so his service, follow you,
- So please you entertain me.’
-
-Now this is the very religion of love. She all along relies little on
-her personal charms, which she fears may have been eclipsed by some
-painted Jay of Italy; she relies on her merit, and her merit is in the
-depth of her love, her truth and constancy. Our admiration of her beauty
-is excited with as little consciousness as possible on her part. There
-are two delicious descriptions given of her, one when she is asleep, and
-one when she is supposed dead. Arviragus thus addresses her—
-
- ——‘With fairest flowers,
- While summer lasts, and I live here, Fidele,
- I’ll sweeten thy sad grave; thou shalt not lack
- The flow’r that’s like thy face, pale primrose, nor
- The azur’d hare-bell, like thy veins, no, nor
- The leaf of eglantine, which not to slander,
- Out-sweeten’d not thy breath.’
-
-The yellow Iachimo gives another thus, when he steals into her
-bedchamber:—
-
- ——‘Cytherea,
- How bravely thou becom’st thy bed! Fresh lily,
- And whiter than the sheets! That I might touch—
- But kiss, one kiss—’Tis her breathing that
- Perfumes the chamber thus: the flame o’ th’ taper
- Bows toward her, and would under-peep her lids
- To see th’ enclosed lights now canopied
- Under the windows, white and azure, laced
- With blue of Heav’n’s own tinct—on her left breast
- A mole cinque-spotted, like the crimson drops
- I’ th’ bottom of a cowslip.’
-
-There is a moral sense in the proud beauty of this last image, a rich
-surfeit of the fancy,—as that well-known passage beginning, ‘Me of my
-lawful pleasure she restrained, and prayed me oft forbearance,’ sets a
-keener edge upon it by the inimitable picture of modesty and
-self-denial.
-
-The character of Cloten, the conceited, booby lord, and rejected lover
-of Imogen, though not very agreeable in itself, and at present obsolete,
-is drawn with much humour and quaint extravagance. The description which
-Imogen gives of his unwelcome addresses to her—‘Whose love-suit hath
-been to me as fearful as a siege’—is enough to cure the most ridiculous
-lover of his folly. It is remarkable that though Cloten makes so poor a
-figure in love, he is described as assuming an air of consequence as the
-Queen’s son in a council of state, and with all the absurdity of his
-person and manners, is not without shrewdness in his observations. So
-true is it that folly is as often owing to a want of proper sentiments
-as to a want of understanding! The exclamation of the ancient critic—Oh
-Menander and Nature, which of you copied from the other! would not be
-misapplied to Shakespear.
-
-The other characters in this play are represented with great truth and
-accuracy, and as it happens in most of the author’s works, there is not
-only the utmost keeping in each separate character; but in the casting
-of the different parts, and their relation to one another, there is an
-affinity and harmony, like what we may observe in the gradations of
-colour in a picture. The striking and powerful contrasts in which
-Shakespear abounds could not escape observation; but the use he makes of
-the principle of analogy to reconcile the greatest diversities of
-character and to maintain a continuity of feeling throughout, has not
-been sufficiently attended to. In CYMBELINE, for instance, the principal
-interest arises out of the unalterable fidelity of Imogen to her husband
-under the most trying circumstances. Now the other parts of the picture
-are filled up with subordinate examples of the same feeling, variously
-modified by different situations, and applied to the purposes of virtue
-or vice. The plot is aided by the amorous importunities of Cloten, by
-the persevering determination of Iachimo to conceal the defeat of his
-project by a daring imposture: the faithful attachment of Pisanio to his
-mistress is an affecting accompaniment to the whole; the obstinate
-adherence to his purpose in Bellarius, who keeps the fate of the young
-princes so long a secret in resentment for the ungrateful return to his
-former services, the incorrigible wickedness of the Queen, and even the
-blind uxorious confidence of Cymbeline, are all so many lines of the
-same story, tending to the same point. The effect of this coincidence is
-rather felt than observed; and as the impression exists unconsciously in
-the mind of the reader, so it probably arose in the same manner in the
-mind of the author, not from design, but from the force of natural
-association, a particular train of thought suggesting different
-inflections of the same predominant feeling, melting into, and
-strengthening one another, like chords in music.
-
-The characters of Bellarius, Guiderius, and Arviragus, and the romantic
-scenes in which they appear, are a fine relief to the intrigues and
-artificial refinements of the court from which they are banished.
-Nothing can surpass the wildness and simplicity of the descriptions of
-the mountain life they lead. They follow the business of huntsmen, not
-of shepherds; and this is in keeping with the spirit of adventure and
-uncertainty in the rest of the story, and with the scenes in which they
-are afterwards called on to act. How admirably the youthful fire and
-impatience to emerge from their obscurity in the young princes is
-opposed to the cooler calculations and prudent resignation of their more
-experienced counsellor! How well the disadvantages of knowledge and of
-ignorance, of solitude and society, are placed against each other!
-
- ‘_Guiderius._ Out of your proof you speak: we poor unfledg’d
- Have never wing’d from view o’ th’ nest; nor know not
- What air’s from home. Haply this life is best,
- If quiet life is best; sweeter to you
- That have a sharper known; well corresponding
- With your stiff age: but unto us it is
- A cell of ignorance; travelling a-bed,
- A prison for a debtor, that not dares
- To stride a limit.
-
- _Arviragus._ What should we speak of
- When we are old as you? When we shall hear
- The rain and wind beat dark December! How,
- In this our pinching cave, shall we discourse
- The freezing hours away? We have seen nothing.
- We are beastly; subtle as the fox for prey,
- Like warlike as the wolf for what we eat:
- Our valour is to chase what flies; our cage
- We make a quire, as doth the prison’d bird,
- And sing our bondage freely.’
-
-The answer of Bellarius to this expostulation is hardly satisfactory;
-for nothing can be an answer to hope, or the passion of the mind for
-unknown good, but experience.—The forest of Arden in _As You Like It_
-can alone compare with the mountain scenes in CYMBELINE: yet how
-different the contemplative quiet of the one from the enterprising
-boldness and precarious mode of subsistence in the other! Shakespear not
-only lets us into the minds of his characters, but gives a tone and
-colour to the scenes he describes from the feelings of their supposed
-inhabitants. He at the same time preserves the utmost propriety of
-action and passion, and gives all their local accompaniments. If he was
-equal to the greatest things, he was not above an attention to the
-smallest. Thus the gallant sportsmen in CYMBELINE have to encounter the
-abrupt declivities of hill and valley: Touchstone and Audrey jog along a
-level path. The deer in CYMBELINE are only regarded as objects of prey,
-‘The game’s a-foot,’ etc.—with Jaques they are fine subjects to moralise
-upon at leisure, ‘under the shade of melancholy boughs.’
-
-We cannot take leave of this play, which is a favourite with us, without
-noticing some occasional touches of natural piety and morality. We may
-allude here to the opening of the scene in which Bellarius instructs the
-young princes to pay their orisons to heaven:
-
- ——‘See, boys! this gate
- Instructs you how t’ adore the Heav’ns; and bows you
- To morning’s holy office.
-
- _Guiderius._ Hail, Heav’n!
-
- _Arviragus._ Hail, Heav’n!
-
- _Bellarius._ Now for our mountain-sport, up to yon hill.’
-
-What a grace and unaffected spirit of piety breathes in this passage! In
-like manner, one of the brothers says to the other, when about to
-perform the funeral rites to Fidele,
-
- ‘Nay, Cadwall, we must lay his head to the east;
- My Father hath a reason for ‘t’—
-
-—as if some allusion to the doctrines of the Christian faith had been
-casually dropped in conversation by the old man, and had been no farther
-inquired into.
-
-Shakespear’s morality is introduced in the same simple, unobtrusive
-manner. Imogen will not let her companions stay away from the chase to
-attend her when sick, and gives her reason for it—
-
- ‘Stick to your journal course; _the breach of custom
- Is breach of all_!’
-
-When the Queen attempts to disguise her motives for procuring the poison
-from Cornelius, by saying she means to try its effects on ‘creatures not
-worth the hanging,’ his answer conveys at once a tacit reproof of her
-hypocrisy, and a useful lesson of humanity—
-
- ——‘Your Highness
- Shall from this practice but make hard your heart.’
-
-
- MACBETH
-
- ‘The poet’s eye in a fine frenzy rolling
- Doth glance from heaven to earth, from earth to heaven;
- And as imagination bodies forth
- The forms of things unknown, the poet’s pen
- Turns them to shape, and gives to airy nothing
- A local habitation and a name.’
-
-MACBETH and _Lear_, _Othello_ and _Hamlet_, are usually reckoned
-Shakespear’s four principal tragedies. _Lear_ stands first for the
-profound intensity of the passion; MACBETH for the wildness of the
-imagination and the rapidity of the action; _Othello_ for the
-progressive interest and powerful alternations of feeling; _Hamlet_ for
-the refined developement of thought and sentiment. If the force of
-genius shewn in each of these works is astonishing, their variety is not
-less so. They are like different creations of the same mind, not one of
-which has the slightest reference to the rest. This distinctness and
-originality is indeed the necessary consequence of truth and nature.
-Shakespear’s genius alone appeared to possess the resources of nature.
-He is ‘your only _tragedy-maker_.’ His plays have the force of things
-upon the mind. What he represents is brought home to the bosom as a part
-of our experience, implanted in the memory as if we had known the
-places, persons, and things of which he treats. MACBETH is like a record
-of a preternatural and tragical event. It has the rugged severity of an
-old chronicle with all that the imagination of the poet can engraft upon
-traditional belief. The castle of Macbeth, round which ‘the air smells
-wooingly,’ and where ‘the temple-haunting martlet builds,’ has a real
-subsistence in the mind; the Weïrd Sisters meet us in person on ‘the
-blasted heath’; the ‘air-drawn dagger’ moves slowly before our eyes; the
-‘gracious Duncan,’ the ‘blood-boultered Banquo’ stand before us; all
-that passed through the mind of Macbeth passes, without the loss of a
-tittle, through ours. All that could actually take place, and all that
-is only possible to be conceived, what was said and what was done, the
-workings of passion, the spells of magic, are brought before us with the
-same absolute truth and vividness—Shakespear excelled in the openings of
-his plays: that of MACBETH is the most striking of any. The wildness of
-the scenery, the sudden shifting of the situations and characters, the
-bustle, the expectations excited, are equally extraordinary. From the
-first entrance of the Witches and the description of them when they meet
-Macbeth,
-
- ——‘What are these
- So wither’d and so wild in their attire,
- That look not like the inhabitants of th’ earth
- And yet are on’t?’
-
-the mind is prepared for all that follows.
-
-This tragedy is alike distinguished for the lofty imagination it
-displays, and for the tumultuous vehemence of the action; and the one is
-made the moving principle of the other. The overwhelming pressure of
-preternatural agency urges on the tide of human passion with redoubled
-force. Macbeth himself appears driven along by the violence of his fate
-like a vessel drifting before a storm: he reels to and fro like a
-drunken man; he staggers under the weight of his own purposes and the
-suggestions of others; he stands at bay with his situation; and from the
-superstitious awe and breathless suspense into which the communications
-of the Weïrd Sisters throw him, is hurried on with daring impatience to
-verify their predictions, and with impious and bloody hand to tear aside
-the veil which hides the uncertainty of the future. He is not equal to
-the struggle with fate and conscience. He now ‘bends up each corporal
-instrument to the terrible feat’; at other times his heart misgives him,
-and he is cowed and abashed by his success. ‘The deed, no less than the
-attempt, confounds him.’ His mind is assailed by the stings of remorse,
-and full of ‘preternatural solicitings.’ His speeches and soliloquies
-are dark riddles on human life, baffling solution, and entangling him in
-their labyrinths. In thought he is absent and perplexed, sudden and
-desperate in act, from a distrust of his own resolution. His energy
-springs from the anxiety and agitation of his mind. His blindly rushing
-forward on the objects of his ambition and revenge, or his recoiling
-from them, equally betrays the harassed state of his feelings.—This part
-of his character is admirably set off by being brought in connection
-with that of Lady Macbeth, whose obdurate strength of will and masculine
-firmness give her the ascendancy over her husband’s faltering virtue.
-She at once seizes on the opportunity that offers for the accomplishment
-of all their wished-for greatness, and never flinches from her object
-till all is over. The magnitude of her resolution almost covers the
-magnitude of her guilt. She is a great bad woman, whom we hate, but whom
-we fear more than we hate. She does not excite our loathing and
-abhorrence like Regan and Gonerill. She is only wicked to gain a great
-end; and is perhaps more distinguished by her commanding presence of
-mind and inexorable self-will, which do not suffer her to be diverted
-from a bad purpose, when once formed, by weak and womanly regrets, than
-by the hardness of her heart or want of natural affections. The
-impression which her lofty determination of character makes on the mind
-of Macbeth is well described where he exclaims,
-
- ——‘Bring forth men children only;
- For thy undaunted mettle should compose
- Nothing but males!’
-
-Nor do the pains she is at to ‘screw his courage to the sticking-place,’
-the reproach to him, not to be ‘lost so poorly in himself,’ the
-assurance that ‘a little water clears them of this deed,’ show anything
-but her greater consistency in depravity. Her strong-nerved ambition
-furnishes ribs of steel to ‘the sides of his intent’; and she is herself
-wound up to the execution of her baneful project with the same
-unshrinking fortitude in crime, that in other circumstances she would
-probably have shown patience in suffering. The deliberate sacrifice of
-all other considerations to the gaining ‘for their future days and
-nights sole sovereign sway and masterdom,’ by the murder of Duncan, is
-gorgeously expressed in her invocation on hearing of ‘his fatal entrance
-under her battlements’:—
-
- ——‘Come all you spirits
- That tend on mortal thoughts, unsex me here:
- And fill me, from the crown to th’ toe, top-full
- Of direst cruelty; make thick my blood,
- Stop up the access and passage to remorse,
- That no compunctious visitings of nature
- Shake my fell purpose, nor keep peace between
- The effect and it. Come to my woman’s breasts,
- And take my milk for gall, you murthering ministers,
- Wherever in your sightless substances
- You wait on nature’s mischief. Come, thick night!
- And pall thee in the dunnest smoke of hell,
- That my keen knife see not the wound it makes,
- Nor heav’n peep through the blanket of the dark,
- To cry, hold, hold!’——
-
-When she first hears that ‘Duncan comes there to sleep’ she is so
-overcome by the news, which is beyond her utmost expectations, that she
-answers the messenger, ‘Thou’rt mad to say it’: and on receiving her
-husband’s account of the predictions of the Witches, conscious of his
-instability of purpose, and that her presence is necessary to goad him
-on to the consummation of his promised greatness, she exclaims—
-
- ——‘Hie thee hither,
- That I may pour my spirits in thine ear,
- And chastise with the valour of my tongue
- All that impedes thee from the golden round,
- Which fate and metaphysical aid doth seem
- To have thee crowned withal.’
-
-This swelling exultation and keen spirit of triumph, this uncontroulable
-eagerness of anticipation, which seems to dilate her form and take
-possession of all her faculties, this solid, substantial flesh and blood
-display of passion, exhibit a striking contrast to the cold, abstracted,
-gratuitous, servile malignity of the Witches, who are equally
-instrumental in urging Macbeth to his fate for the mere love of
-mischief, and from a disinterested delight in deformity and cruelty.
-They are hags of mischief, obscene panders to iniquity, malicious from
-their impotence of enjoyment, enamoured of destruction, because they are
-themselves unreal, abortive, half-existences—who become sublime from
-their exemption from all human sympathies and contempt for all human
-affairs, as Lady Macbeth does by the force of passion! Her fault seems
-to have been an excess of that strong principle of self-interest and
-family aggrandisement, not amenable to the common feelings of compassion
-and justice, which is so marked a feature in barbarous nations and
-times. A passing reflection of this kind, on the resemblance of the
-sleeping king to her father, alone prevents her from slaying Duncan with
-her own hand.
-
-In speaking of the character of Lady Macbeth, we ought not to pass over
-Mrs. Siddons’s manner of acting that part. We can conceive of nothing
-grander. It was something above nature. It seemed almost as if a being
-of a superior order had dropped from a higher sphere to awe the world
-with the majesty of her appearance. Power was seated on her brow,
-passion emanated from her breast as from a shrine; she was tragedy
-personified. In coming on in the sleeping-scene, her eyes were open, but
-their sense was shut. She was like a person bewildered and unconscious
-of what she did. Her lips moved involuntarily—all her gestures were
-involuntary and mechanical. She glided on and off the stage like an
-apparition. To have seen her in that character was an event in every
-one’s life, not to be forgotten.
-
-The dramatic beauty of the character of Duncan, which excites the
-respect and pity even of his murderers, has been often pointed out. It
-forms a picture of itself. An instance of the author’s power of giving a
-striking effect to a common reflection, by the manner of introducing it,
-occurs in a speech of Duncan, complaining of his having been deceived in
-his opinion of the Thane of Cawdor, at the very moment that he is
-expressing the most unbounded confidence in the loyalty and services of
-Macbeth.
-
- ‘There is no art
- To find the mind’s construction in the face:
- He was a gentleman, on whom I built
- An absolute trust.
- O worthiest cousin, (_addressing himself to Macbeth_.)
- The sin of my ingratitude e’en now
- Was great upon me,’ etc.
-
-Another passage to show that Shakespear lost sight of nothing that could
-in any way give relief or heightening to his subject, is the
-conversation which takes place between Banquo and Fleance immediately
-before the murder-scene of Duncan.
-
- ‘_Banquo._ How goes the night, boy?
-
- _Fleance._ The moon is down: I have not heard the clock.
-
- _Banquo._ And she goes down at twelve.
-
- _Fleance._ I take’t, ’tis later, Sir.
-
- _Banquo._ Hold, take my sword. There’s husbandry in heav’n,
- Their candles are all out.—
- A heavy summons lies like lead upon me,
- And yet I would not sleep: Merciful Powers,
- Restrain in me the cursed thoughts that nature
- Gives way to in repose.’
-
-In like manner, a fine idea is given of the gloomy coming on of evening,
-just as Banquo is going to be assassinated.
-
- ‘Light thickens and the crow
- Makes wing to the rooky wood.’
-
- . . . . .
-
- ‘Now spurs the lated traveller apace
- To gain the timely inn.’
-
-MACBETH (generally speaking) is done upon a stronger and more systematic
-principle of contrast than any other of Shakespear’s plays. It moves
-upon the verge of an abyss, and is a constant struggle between life and
-death. The action is desperate and the reaction is dreadful. It is a
-huddling together of fierce extremes, a war of opposite natures which of
-them shall destroy the other. There is nothing but what has a violent
-end or violent beginnings. The lights and shades are laid on with a
-determined hand; the transitions from triumph to despair, from the
-height of terror to the repose of death, are sudden and startling; every
-passion brings in its fellow-contrary, and the thoughts pitch and jostle
-against each other as in the dark. The whole play is an unruly chaos of
-strange and forbidden things, where the ground rocks under our feet.
-Shakespear’s genius here took its full swing, and trod upon the farthest
-bounds of nature and passion. This circumstance will account for the
-abruptness and violent antitheses of the style, the throes and labour
-which run through the expression, and from defects will turn them into
-beauties. ‘So fair and foul a day I have not seen,’ etc. ‘Such welcome
-and unwelcome news together.’ ‘Men’s lives are like the flowers in their
-caps, dying or ere they sicken.’ ‘Look like the innocent flower, but be
-the serpent under it.’ The scene before the castle-gate follows the
-appearance of the Witches on the heath, and is followed by a midnight
-murder. Duncan is cut off betimes by treason leagued with witchcraft,
-and Macduff is ripped untimely from his mother’s womb to avenge his
-death. Macbeth, after the death of Banquo, wishes for his presence in
-extravagant terms, ‘To him and all we thirst,’ and when his ghost
-appears, cries out, ‘Avaunt and quit my sight,’ and being gone, he is
-‘himself again.’ Macbeth resolves to get rid of Macduff, that ‘he may
-sleep in spite of thunder’; and cheers his wife on the doubtful
-intelligence of Banquo’s taking-off with the encouragement—‘Then be thou
-jocund: ere the bat has flown his cloistered flight; ere to black
-Hecate’s summons the shard-born beetle has rung night’s yawning peal,
-there shall be done—a deed of dreadful note.’ In Lady Macbeth’s speech
-‘Had he not resembled my father as he slept, I had done’t,’ there is
-murder and filial piety together; and in urging him to fulfil his
-vengeance against the defenceless king, her thoughts spare the blood
-neither of infants nor old age. The description of the Witches is full
-of the same contradictory principle; they ‘rejoice when good kings
-bleed,’ they are neither of the earth nor the air, but both; ‘they
-should be women, but their beards forbid it’; they take all the pains
-possible to lead Macbeth on to the height of his ambition, only to
-betray him ‘in deeper consequence,’ and after showing him all the pomp
-of their art, discover their malignant delight in his disappointed
-hopes, by that bitter taunt, ‘Why stands Macbeth thus amazedly?’ We
-might multiply such instances every where.
-
-The leading features in the character of Macbeth are striking enough,
-and they form what may be thought at first only a bold, rude, Gothic
-outline. By comparing it with other characters of the same author we
-shall perceive the absolute truth and identity which is observed in the
-midst of the giddy whirl and rapid career of events. Macbeth in
-Shakespear no more loses his identity of character in the fluctuations
-of fortune or the storm of passion, than Macbeth in himself would have
-lost the identity of his person. Thus he is as distinct a being from
-Richard III. as it is possible to imagine, though these two characters
-in common hands, and indeed in the hands of any other poet, would have
-been a repetition of the same general idea, more or less exaggerated.
-For both are tyrants, usurpers, murderers, both aspiring and ambitious,
-both courageous, cruel, treacherous. But Richard is cruel from nature
-and constitution. Macbeth becomes so from accidental circumstances.
-Richard is from his birth deformed in body and mind, and naturally
-incapable of good. Macbeth is full of ‘the milk of human kindness,’ is
-frank, sociable, generous. He is tempted to the commission of guilt by
-golden opportunities, by the instigations of his wife, and by prophetic
-warnings. Fate and metaphysical aid conspire against his virtue and his
-loyalty. Richard on the contrary needs no prompter, but wades through a
-series of crimes to the height of his ambition from the ungovernable
-violence of his temper and a reckless love of mischief. He is never gay
-but in the prospect or in the success of his villainies: Macbeth is full
-of horror at the thoughts of the murder of Duncan, which he is with
-difficulty prevailed on to commit, and of remorse after its
-perpetration. Richard has no mixture of common humanity in his
-composition, no regard to kindred or posterity, he owns no fellowship
-with others, he is ‘himself alone.’ Macbeth is not destitute of feelings
-of sympathy, is accessible to pity, is even made in some measure the
-dupe of his uxoriousness, ranks the loss of friends, of the cordial love
-of his followers, and of his good name, among the causes which have made
-him weary of life, and regrets that he has ever seized the crown by
-unjust means, since he cannot transmit it to his posterity—
-
- ‘For Banquo’s issue have I fil’d my mind—
- For them the gracious Duncan have I murther’d,
- To make them kings, the seed of Banquo kings.’
-
-In the agitation of his mind, he envies those whom he has sent to peace.
-‘Duncan is in his grave; after life’s fitful fever he sleeps well.’—It
-is true, he becomes more callous as he plunges deeper in guilt,
-‘direness is thus rendered familiar to his slaughterous thoughts,’ and
-he in the end anticipates his wife in the boldness and bloodiness of his
-enterprises, while she for want of the same stimulus of action, ‘is
-troubled with thick-coming fancies that rob her of her rest,’ goes mad
-and dies. Macbeth endeavours to escape from reflection on his crimes by
-repelling their consequences, and banishes remorse for the past by the
-meditation of future mischief. This is not the principle of Richard’s
-cruelty, which displays the wanton malice of a fiend as much as the
-frailty of human passion. Macbeth is goaded on to acts of violence and
-retaliation by necessity; to Richard, blood is a pastime.—There are
-other decisive differences inherent in the two characters. Richard may
-be regarded as a man of the world, a plotting, hardened knave, wholly
-regardless of every thing but his own ends, and the means to secure
-them.—Not so Macbeth. The superstitions of the age, the rude state of
-society, the local scenery and customs, all give a wildness and
-imaginary grandeur to his character. From the strangeness of the events
-that surround him, he is full of amazement and fear; and stands in doubt
-between the world of reality and the world of fancy. He sees sights not
-shown to mortal eye, and hears unearthly music. All is tumult and
-disorder within and without his mind; his purposes recoil upon himself,
-are broken and disjointed; he is the double thrall of his passions and
-his evil destiny. Richard is not a character either of imagination or
-pathos, but of pure self-will. There is no conflict of opposite feelings
-in his breast. The apparitions which he sees only haunt him in his
-sleep; nor does he live like Macbeth in a waking dream. Macbeth has
-considerable energy and manliness of character; but then he is ‘subject
-to all the skyey influences.’ He is sure of nothing but the present
-moment. Richard in the busy turbulence of his projects never loses his
-self-possession, and makes use of every circumstance that happens as an
-instrument of his long-reaching designs. In his last extremity we can
-only regard him as a wild beast taken in the toils: while we never
-entirely lose our concern for Macbeth; and he calls back all our
-sympathy by that fine close of thoughtful melancholy—
-
- ‘My way of life is fallen into the sear,
- The yellow leaf; and that which should accompany old age,
- As honour, troops of friends, I must not look to have;
- But in their stead, curses not loud but deep,
- Mouth-honour, breath, which the poor heart
- Would fain deny, and dare not.’
-
-We can conceive a common actor to play Richard tolerably well; we can
-conceive no one to play Macbeth properly, or to look like a man that had
-encountered the Weïrd Sisters. All the actors that we have ever seen,
-appear as if they had encountered them on the boards of Covent-garden or
-Drury-lane, but not on the heath at Fores, and as if they did not
-believe what they had seen. The Witches of MACBETH indeed are ridiculous
-on the modern stage, and we doubt if the Furies of Æschylus would be
-more respected. The progress of manners and knowledge has an influence
-on the stage, and will in time perhaps destroy both tragedy and comedy.
-Filch’s picking pockets in the _Beggar’s Opera_ is not so good a jest as
-it used to be: by the force of the police and of philosophy, Lillo’s
-murders and the ghosts in Shakespear will become obsolete. At last,
-there will be nothing left, good nor bad, to be desired or dreaded, on
-the theatre or in real life.—A question has been started with respect to
-the originality of Shakespear’s Witches, which has been well answered by
-Mr. Lamb in his notes to the ‘Specimens of Early Dramatic Poetry.’
-
- ‘Though some resemblance may be traced between the charms in
- MACBETH, and the incantations in this play (the Witch of Middleton),
- which is supposed to have preceded it, this coincidence will not
- detract much from the originality of Shakespear. His Witches are
- distinguished from the Witches of Middleton by essential
- differences. These are creatures to whom man or woman plotting some
- dire mischief might resort for occasional consultation. Those
- originate deeds of blood, and begin bad impulses to men. From the
- moment that their eyes first meet with Macbeth’s, he is spell-bound.
- That meeting sways his destiny. He can never break the fascination.
- These Witches can hurt the body; those have power over the
- soul.—Hecate in Middleton has a son, a low buffoon: the hags of
- Shakespear have neither child of their own, nor seem to be descended
- from any parent. They are foul anomalies, of whom we know not whence
- they are sprung, nor whether they have beginning or ending. As they
- are without human passions, so they seem to be without human
- relations. They come with thunder and lightning, and vanish to airy
- music. This is all we know of them.—Except Hecate, they have no
- names, which heightens their mysteriousness. The names, and some of
- the properties which Middleton has given to his hags, excite smiles.
- The Weïrd Sisters are serious things. Their presence cannot co-exist
- with mirth. But, in a lesser degree, the Witches of Middleton are
- fine creations. Their power too is, in some measure, over the mind.
- They raise jars, jealousies, strifes, _like a thick scurf o’er
- life_.’
-
-
- JULIUS CÆSAR
-
-JULIUS CÆSAR was one of three principal plays by different authors,
-pitched upon by the celebrated Earl of Hallifax to be brought out in a
-splendid manner by subscription, in the year 1707. The other two were
-the _King and No King_ of Fletcher, and Dryden’s _Maiden Queen_. There
-perhaps might be political reasons for this selection, as far as regards
-our author. Otherwise, Shakespear’s JULIUS CÆSAR is not equal as a
-whole, to either of his other plays taken from the Roman history. It is
-inferior in interest to _Coriolanus_, and both in interest and power to
-_Antony and Cleopatra_. It however abounds in admirable and affecting
-passages, and is remarkable for the profound knowledge of character, in
-which Shakespear could scarcely fail. If there is any exception to this
-remark, it is in the hero of the piece himself. We do not much admire
-the representation here given of Julius Cæsar, nor do we think it
-answers to the portrait given of him in his Commentaries. He makes
-several vapouring and rather pedantic speeches, and does nothing.
-Indeed, he has nothing to do. So far, the fault of the character is the
-fault of the plot.
-
-The spirit with which the poet has entered at once into the manners of
-the common people, and the jealousies and heart-burnings of the
-different factions, is shown in the first scene, where Flavius and
-Marullus, tribunes of the people, and some citizens of Rome, appear upon
-the stage.
-
- ‘_Flavius._ Thou art a cobler, art thou?
-
- _Cobler._ Truly, Sir, _all_ that I live by, is the _awl_. I
- meddle with no tradesman’s matters, nor woman’s matters, but
- _with-al_, I am indeed, Sir, a surgeon to old shoes; when they
- are in great danger, I recover them.
-
- _Flavius._ But wherefore art not in thy shop to-day?
- Why dost thou lead these men about the streets?
-
- _Cobler._ Truly, Sir, to wear out their shoes, to get myself
- into more work. But indeed, Sir, we make holiday to see Cæsar,
- and rejoice in his triumph.’
-
-To this specimen of quaint low humour immediately follows that
-unexpected and animated burst of indignant eloquence, put into the mouth
-of one of the angry tribunes.
-
- ‘_Marullus._ Wherefore rejoice!—What conquest brings he home?
- What tributaries follow him to Rome,
- To grace in captive-bonds his chariot-wheels?
- Oh you hard hearts, you cruel men of Rome!
- Knew you not Pompey? Many a time and oft
- Have you climb’d up to walls and battlements,
- To towers and windows, yea, to chimney-tops,
- Your infants in your arms, and there have sat
- The live-long day with patient expectation,
- To see great Pompey pass the streets of Rome:
- And when you saw his chariot but appear,
- Have you not made an universal shout,
- That Tyber trembled underneath his banks
- To hear the replication of your sounds,
- Made in his concave shores?
- And do you now put on your best attire?
- And do you now cull out an holiday?
- And do you now strew flowers in his way
- That comes in triumph over Pompey’s blood?
- Begone——
- Run to your houses, fall upon your knees,
- Pray to the Gods to intermit the plague,
- That needs must light on this ingratitude.’
-
-The well-known dialogue between Brutus and Cassius, in which the latter
-breaks the design of the conspiracy to the former, and partly gains him
-over to it, is a noble piece of high-minded declamation. Cassius’s
-insisting on the pretended effeminacy of Cæsar’s character, and his
-description of their swimming across the Tiber together, ‘once upon a
-raw and gusty day,’ are among the finest strokes in it. But perhaps the
-whole is not equal to the short scene which follows, when Cæsar enters
-with his train:—
-
- ‘_Brutus._ The games are done, and Cæsar is returning.
-
- _Cassius._ As they pass by, pluck Casca by the sleeve,
- And he will, after his sour fashion, tell you
- What has proceeded worthy note to day.
-
- _Brutus._ I will do so; but look you, Cassius—
- The angry spot doth glow on Cæsar’s brow,
- And all the rest look like a chidden train.
- Calphurnia’s cheek is pale; and Cicero
- Looks with such ferret and such fiery eyes,
- As we have seen him in the Capitol,
- Being crost in conference by some senators.
-
- _Cassius._ Casca will tell us what the matter is.
-
- _Cæsar._ Antonius——
-
- _Antony._ Cæsar?
-
- _Cæsar._ Let me have men about me that are fat,
- Sleek-headed men, and such as sleep a-nights:
- Yon Cassius has a lean and hungry look,
- He thinks too much; such men are dangerous.
-
- _Antony._ Fear him not, Cæsar, he’s not dangerous:
- He is a noble Roman, and well given.
-
- _Cæsar._ Would he were fatter; but I fear him not:
- Yet if my name were liable to fear,
- I do not know the man I should avoid
- So soon as that spare Cassius. He reads much;
- He is a great observer; and he looks
- Quite through the deeds of men. He loves no plays,
- As thou dost, Antony; he hears no music:
- Seldom he smiles, and smiles in such a sort,
- As if he mock’d himself, and scorn’d his spirit,
- That could be mov’d to smile at any thing.
- Such men as he be never at heart’s ease,
- Whilst they behold a greater than themselves;
- And therefore are they very dangerous.
- I rather tell thee what is to be fear’d
- Than what I fear; for always I am Cæsar.
- Come on my right hand, for this ear is deaf,
- And tell me truly what thou think’st of him.’
-
-We know hardly any passage more expressive of the genius of Shakespear
-than this. It is as if he had been actually present, had known the
-different characters and what they thought of one another, and had taken
-down what he heard and saw, their looks, words, and gestures, just as
-they happened.
-
-The character of Mark Antony is farther speculated upon where the
-conspirators deliberate whether he shall fall with Cæsar. Brutus is
-against it—
-
- ‘And for Mark Antony, think not of him:
- For he can do no more than Cæsar’s arm,
- When Cæsar’s head is off.
-
- _Cassius._ Yet I do fear him:
- For in th’ ingrafted love he bears to Cæsar——
-
- _Brutus._ Alas, good Cassius, do not think of him:
- If he love Cæsar, all that he can do
- Is to himself, take thought, and die for Cæsar:
- And that were much, he should; for he is giv’n
- To sports, to wildness, and much company.
-
- _Trebonius._ There is no fear in him; let him not die:
- For he will live, and laugh at this hereafter.’
-
-They were in the wrong; and Cassius was right.
-
-The honest manliness of Brutus is however sufficient to find out the
-unfitness of Cicero to be included in their enterprise, from his
-affected egotism and literary vanity.
-
- ‘O, name him not: let us not break with him;
- For he will never follow anything,
- That other men begin.’
-
-His scepticism as to prodigies and his moralising on the weather—‘This
-disturbed sky is not to walk in’—are in the same spirit of refined
-imbecility.
-
-Shakespear has in this play and elsewhere shown the same penetration
-into political character and the springs of public events as into those
-of every-day life. For instance, the whole design of the conspirators to
-liberate their country fails from the generous temper and overweening
-confidence of Brutus in the goodness of their cause and the assistance
-of others. Thus it has always been. Those who mean well themselves think
-well of others, and fall a prey to their security. That humanity and
-honesty which dispose men to resist injustice and tyranny render them
-unfit to cope with the cunning and power of those who are opposed to
-them. The friends of liberty trust to the professions of others, because
-they are themselves sincere, and endeavour to reconcile the public good
-with the least possible hurt to its enemies, who have no regard to any
-thing but their own unprincipled ends, and stick at nothing to
-accomplish them. Cassius was better cut out for a conspirator. His heart
-prompted his head. His watchful jealousy made him fear the worst that
-might happen, and his irritability of temper added to his inveteracy of
-purpose, and sharpened his patriotism. The mixed nature of his motives
-made him fitter to contend with bad men. The vices are never so well
-employed as in combating one another. Tyranny and servility are to be
-dealt with after their own fashion: otherwise, they will triumph over
-those who spare them, and finally pronounce their funeral panegyric, as
-Antony did that of Brutus.
-
- ‘All the conspirators, save only he,
- Did that they did in envy of great Cæsar:
- He only in a general honest thought
- And common good to all, made one of them.’
-
-The quarrel between Brutus and Cassius is managed in a masterly way. The
-dramatic fluctuation of passion, the calmness of Brutus, the heat of
-Cassius, are admirably described; and the exclamation of Cassius on
-hearing of the death of Portia, which he does not learn till after their
-reconciliation, ‘How ‘scaped I killing when I crost you so?’ gives
-double force to all that has gone before. The scene between Brutus and
-Portia, where she endeavours to extort the secret of the conspiracy from
-him, is conceived in the most heroical spirit, and the burst of
-tenderness in Brutus—
-
- ‘You are my true and honourable wife;
- As dear to me as are the ruddy drops
- That visit my sad heart’—
-
-is justified by her whole behaviour. Portia’s breathless impatience to
-learn the event of the conspiracy, in the dialogue with Lucius, is full
-of passion. The interest which Portia takes in Brutus and that which
-Calphurnia takes in the fate of Cæsar are discriminated with the nicest
-precision. Mark Antony’s speech over the dead body of Cæsar has been
-justly admired for the mixture of pathos and artifice in it: that of
-Brutus certainly is not so good.
-
-The entrance of the conspirators to the house of Brutus at midnight is
-rendered very impressive. In the midst of this scene, we meet with one
-of those careless and natural digressions which occur so frequently and
-beautifully in Shakespear. After Cassius has introduced his friends one
-by one, Brutus says—
-
- ‘They are all welcome.
- What watchful cares do interpose themselves
- Betwixt your eyes and night?
-
- _Cassius._ Shall I entreat a word? (_They whisper._)
-
- _Decius._ Here lies the east: doth not the day break here?
-
- _Casca._ No.
-
- _Cinna._ O pardon, Sir, it doth; and yon grey lines,
- That fret the clouds, are messengers of day.
-
- _Casca._ You shall confess, that you are both deceiv’d:
- Here, as I point my sword, the sun arises,
- Which is a great way growing on the south,
- Weighing the youthful season of the year.
- Some two months hence, up higher toward the north
- He first presents his fire, and the high east
- Stands as the Capitol, directly here.’
-
-We cannot help thinking this graceful familiarity better than all the
-fustian in the world.—The truth of history in JULIUS CÆSAR is very ably
-worked up with dramatic effect. The councils of generals, the doubtful
-turns of battles, are represented to the life. The death of Brutus is
-worthy of him—it has the dignity of the Roman senator with the firmness
-of the Stoic philosopher. But what is perhaps better than either, is the
-little incident of his boy, Lucius, falling asleep over his instrument,
-as he is playing to his master in his tent, the night before the battle.
-Nature had played him the same forgetful trick once before on the night
-of the conspiracy. The humanity of Brutus is the same on both occasions.
-
- ——‘It is no matter:
- Enjoy the honey-heavy dew of slumber.
- Thou hast no figures nor no fantasies,
- Which busy care draws in the brains of men.
- Therefore thou sleep’st so sound.’
-
-
- OTHELLO
-
-It has been said that tragedy purifies the affections by terror and
-pity. That is, it substitutes imaginary sympathy for mere selfishness.
-It gives us a high and permanent interest, beyond ourselves, in humanity
-as such. It raises the great, the remote, and the possible to an
-equality with the real, the little and the near. It makes man a partaker
-with his kind. It subdues and softens the stubbornness of his will. It
-teaches him that there are and have been others like himself, by showing
-him as in a glass what they have felt, thought, and done. It opens the
-chambers of the human heart. It leaves nothing indifferent to us that
-can affect our common nature. It excites our sensibility by exhibiting
-the passions wound up to the utmost pitch by the power of imagination or
-the temptation of circumstances; and corrects their fatal excesses in
-ourselves by pointing to the greater extent of sufferings and of crimes
-to which they have led others. Tragedy creates a balance of the
-affections. It makes us thoughtful spectators in the lists of life. It
-is the refiner of the species; a discipline of humanity. The habitual
-study of poetry and works of imagination is one chief part of a
-well-grounded education. A taste for liberal art is necessary to
-complete the character of a gentleman. Science alone is hard and
-mechanical. It exercises the understanding upon things out of ourselves,
-while it leaves the affections unemployed, or engrossed with our own
-immediate, narrow interests.—OTHELLO furnishes an illustration of these
-remarks. It excites our sympathy in an extraordinary degree. The moral
-it conveys has a closer application to the concerns of human life than
-that of almost any other of Shakespear’s plays. ‘It comes directly home
-to the bosoms and business of men.’ The pathos in _Lear_ is indeed more
-dreadful and overpowering: but it is less natural, and less of every
-day’s occurrence. We have not the same degree of sympathy with the
-passions described in _Macbeth_. The interest in _Hamlet_ is more remote
-and reflex. That of OTHELLO is at once equally profound and affecting.
-
-The picturesque contrasts of character in this play are almost as
-remarkable as the depth of the passion. The Moor Othello, the gentle
-Desdemona, the villain Iago, the good-natured Cassio, the fool Roderigo,
-present a range and variety of character as striking and palpable as
-that produced by the opposition of costume in a picture. Their
-distinguishing qualities stand out to the mind’s eye, so that even when
-we are not thinking of their actions or sentiments, the idea of their
-persons is still as present to us as ever. These characters and the
-images they stamp upon the mind are the farthest asunder possible, the
-distance between them is immense: yet the compass of knowledge and
-invention which the poet has shown in embodying these extreme creations
-of his genius is only greater than the truth and felicity with which he
-has identified each character with itself, or blended their different
-qualities together in the same story. What a contrast the character of
-Othello forms to that of Iago! At the same time, the force of conception
-with which these two figures are opposed to each other is rendered still
-more intense by the complete consistency with which the traits of each
-character are brought out in a state of the highest finishing. The
-making one black and the other white, the one unprincipled, the other
-unfortunate in the extreme, would have answered the common purposes of
-effect, and satisfied the ambition of an ordinary painter of character.
-Shakespear has laboured the finer shades of difference in both with as
-much care and skill as if he had had to depend on the execution alone
-for the success of his design. On the other hand, Desdemona and Æmilia
-are not meant to be opposed with anything like strong contrast to each
-other. Both are, to outward appearance, characters of common life, not
-more distinguished than women usually are, by difference of rank and
-situation. The difference of their thoughts and sentiments is however
-laid open, their minds are separated from each other by signs as plain
-and as little to be mistaken as the complexions of their husbands.
-
-The movement of the passion in Othello is exceedingly different from
-that of Macbeth. In Macbeth there is a violent struggle between opposite
-feelings, between ambition and the stings of conscience, almost from
-first to last: in Othello, the doubtful conflict between contrary
-passions, though dreadful, continues only for a short time, and the
-chief interest is excited by the alternate ascendancy of different
-passions, by the entire and unforeseen change from the fondest love and
-most unbounded confidence to the tortures of jealousy and the madness of
-hatred. The revenge of Othello, after it has once taken thorough
-possession of his mind, never quits it, but grows stronger and stronger
-at every moment of its delay. The nature of the Moor is noble,
-confiding, tender, and generous; but his blood is of the most
-inflammable kind; and being once roused by a sense of his wrongs, he is
-stopped by no considerations of remorse or pity till he has given a
-loose to all the dictates of his rage and his despair. It is in working
-his noble nature up to this extremity through rapid but gradual
-transitions, in raising passion to its height from the smallest
-beginnings and in spite of all obstacles, in painting the expiring
-conflict between love and hatred, tenderness and resentment, jealousy
-and remorse, in unfolding the strength and the weakness of our nature,
-in uniting sublimity of thought with the anguish of the keenest woe, in
-putting in motion the various impulses that agitate this our mortal
-being, and at last blending them in that noble tide of deep and
-sustained passion, impetuous but majestic, that ‘flows on to the
-Propontic, and knows no ebb,’ that Shakespear has shown the mastery of
-his genius and of his power over the human heart. The third act of
-OTHELLO is his finest display, not of knowledge or passion separately,
-but of the two combined, of the knowledge of character with the
-expression of passion, of consummate art in the keeping up of
-appearances with the profound workings of nature, and the convulsive
-movements of uncontroulable agony, of the power of inflicting torture
-and of suffering it. Not only is the tumult of passion in Othello’s mind
-heaved up from the very bottom of the soul, but every the slightest
-undulation of feeling is seen on the surface, as it arises from the
-impulses of imagination or the malicious suggestions of Iago. The
-progressive preparation for the catastrophe is wonderfully managed from
-the Moor’s first gallant recital of the story of his love, of ‘the
-spells and witchcraft he had used,’ from his unlooked-for and romantic
-success, the fond satisfaction with which he dotes on his own happiness,
-the unreserved tenderness of Desdemona and her innocent importunities in
-favour of Cassio, irritating the suspicions instilled into her husband’s
-mind by the perfidy of Iago, and rankling there to poison, till he loses
-all command of himself, and his rage can only be appeased by blood. She
-is introduced, just before Iago begins to put his scheme in practice,
-pleading for Cassio with all the thoughtless gaiety of friendship and
-winning confidence in the love of Othello.
-
- ‘What! Michael Cassio?
- That came a wooing with you, and so many a time,
- When I have spoke of you dispraisingly,
- Hath ta’en your part, to have so much to do
- To bring him in?—Why this is not a boon:
- ’Tis as I should intreat you wear your gloves,
- Or feed on nourishing meats, or keep you warm;
- Or sue to you to do a peculiar profit
- To your person. Nay, when I have a suit,
- Wherein I mean to touch your love indeed,
- It shall be full of poise, and fearful to be granted.’
-
-Othello’s confidence, at first only staggered by broken hints and
-insinuations, recovers itself at sight of Desdemona; and he exclaims
-
- ‘If she be false, O then Heav’n mocks itself:
- I’ll not believe it.’
-
-But presently after, on brooding over his suspicions by himself, and
-yielding to his apprehensions of the worst, his smothered jealousy
-breaks out into open fury, and he returns to demand satisfaction of Iago
-like a wild beast stung with the envenomed shaft of the hunters. ‘Look
-where he comes,’ etc. In this state of exasperation and violence, after
-the first paroxysms of his grief and tenderness have had their vent in
-that passionate apostrophe, ‘I felt not Cassio’s kisses on her lips,’
-Iago, by false aspersions, and by presenting the most revolting images
-to his mind,[65] easily turns the storm of passion from himself against
-Desdemona, and works him up into a trembling agony of doubt and fear, in
-which he abandons all his love and hopes in a breath.
-
- ‘Now do I see ’tis true. Look here, Iago,
- All my fond love thus do I blow to Heav’n. ’Tis gone.
- Arise black vengeance from the hollow hell;
- Yield up, O love, thy crown and hearted throne
- To tyrannous hate! Swell bosom with thy fraught;
- For ’tis of aspicks’ tongues.’
-
-From this time, his raging thoughts ‘never look back, ne’er ebb to
-humble love,’ till his revenge is sure of its object, the painful
-regrets and involuntary recollections of past circumstances which cross
-his mind amidst the dim trances of passion, aggravating the sense of his
-wrongs, but not shaking his purpose. Once indeed, where Iago shows him
-Cassio with the handkerchief in his hand, and making sport (as he
-thinks) of his misfortunes, the intolerable bitterness of his feelings,
-the extreme sense of shame, makes him fall to praising her
-accomplishments and relapse into a momentary fit of weakness, ‘Yet, oh
-the pity of it, Iago, the pity of it!’ This returning fondness however
-only serves, as it is managed by Iago, to whet his revenge, and set his
-heart more against her. In his conversations with Desdemona, the
-persuasion of her guilt and the immediate proofs of her duplicity seem
-to irritate his resentment and aversion to her; but in the scene
-immediately preceding her death, the recollection of his love returns
-upon him in all its tenderness and force; and after her death, he all at
-once forgets his wrongs in the sudden and irreparable sense of his loss.
-
- ‘My wife! My wife! What wife? I have no wife.
- Oh insupportable! Oh heavy hour!’
-
-This happens before he is assured of her innocence; but afterwards his
-remorse is as dreadful as his revenge has been, and yields only to fixed
-and death-like despair. His farewell speech, before he kills himself, in
-which he conveys his reasons to the senate for the murder of his wife,
-is equal to the first speech in which he gave them an account of his
-courtship of her, and ‘his whole course of love.’ Such an ending was
-alone worthy of such a commencement.
-
-If any thing could add to the force of our sympathy with Othello, or
-compassion for his fate, it would be the frankness and generosity of his
-nature, which so little deserve it. When Iago first begins to practise
-upon his unsuspecting friendship, he answers—
-
- ——‘’Tis not to make me jealous,
- To say my wife is fair, feeds well, loves company,
- Is free of speech, sings, plays, and dances well;
- Where virtue is, these are most virtuous.
- Nor from my own weak merits will I draw
- The smallest fear or doubt of her revolt,
- For she had eyes and chose me.’
-
-This character is beautifully (and with affecting simplicity) confirmed
-by what Desdemona herself says of him to Æmilia after she has lost the
-handkerchief, the first pledge of his love to her.
-
- ‘Believe me, I had rather have lost my purse
- Full of cruzadoes. And but my noble Moor
- Is true of mind, and made of no such baseness,
- As jealous creatures are, it were enough
- To put him to ill thinking.
-
- _Æmilia._ Is he not jealous?
-
- _Desdemona._ Who he? I think the sun where he was born
- Drew all such humours from him.’
-
-In a short speech of Æmilia’s, there occurs one of those
-side-intimations of the fluctuations of passion which we seldom meet
-with but in Shakespear. After Othello has resolved upon the death of his
-wife, and bids her dismiss her attendant for the night, she answers,
-
- ‘I will, my Lord.
-
- _Æmilia._ How goes it now? _He looks gentler than he did._’
-
-Shakespear has here put into half a line what some authors would have
-spun out into ten set speeches.
-
-The character of Desdemona is inimitable both in itself, and as it
-appears in contrast with Othello’s groundless jealousy, and with the
-foul conspiracy of which she is the innocent victim. Her beauty and
-external graces are only indirectly glanced at: we see ‘her visage in
-her mind’; her character every where predominates over her person.
-
- ‘A maiden never bold:
- Of spirit so still and quiet, that her motion
- Blush’d at itself.’
-
-There is one fine compliment paid to her by Cassio, who exclaims
-triumphantly when she comes ashore at Cyprus after the storm,
-
- ‘Tempests themselves, high seas, and howling winds,
- As having sense of beauty, do omit
- Their mortal natures, letting safe go by
- The divine Desdemona.’
-
-In general, as is the case with most of Shakespear’s females, we lose
-sight of her personal charms in her attachment and devotedness to her
-husband. ‘She is subdued even to the very quality of her lord’; and to
-Othello’s ‘honours and his valiant parts her soul and fortunes
-consecrates.’ The lady protests so much herself, and she is as good as
-her word. The truth of conception, with which timidity and boldness are
-united in the same character, is marvellous. The extravagance of her
-resolutions, the pertinacity of her affections, may be said to arise out
-of the gentleness of her nature. They imply an unreserved reliance on
-the purity of her own intentions, an entire surrender of her fears to
-her love, a knitting of herself (heart and soul) to the fate of another.
-Bating the commencement of her passion, which is a little fantastical
-and headstrong (though even that may perhaps be consistently accounted
-for from her inability to resist a rising inclination[66]) her whole
-character consists in having no will of her own, no prompter but her
-obedience. Her romantic turn is only a consequence of the domestic and
-practical part of her disposition; and instead of following Othello to
-the wars, she would gladly have ‘remained at home a moth of peace,’ if
-her husband could have staid with her. Her resignation and angelic
-sweetness of temper do not desert her at the last. The scenes in which
-she laments and tries to account for Othello’s estrangement from her are
-exquisitely beautiful. After he has struck her, and called her names,
-she says,
-
- ——‘Alas, Iago,
- What shall I do to win my lord again?
- Good friend, go to him; for by this light of heaven,
- I know not how I lost him. Here I kneel;
- If e’er my will did trespass ‘gainst his love,
- Either in discourse, or thought, or actual deed,
- Or that mine eyes, mine ears, or any sense
- Delighted them on any other form;
- Or that I do not, and ever did,
- And ever will, though he do shake me off
- To beggarly divorcement, love him dearly,
- Comfort forswear me. Unkindness may do much,
- And his unkindness may defeat my life,
- But never taint my love.
-
- _Iago._ I pray you be content: ’tis but his humour.
- The business of the state does him offence.
-
- _Desdemona._ If ‘twere no other!——
-
-The scene which follows with Æmilia and the song of the Willow, are
-equally beautiful, and show the author’s extreme power of varying the
-expression of passion, in all its moods and in all circumstances.
-
- ‘_Æmilia._ Would you had never seen him.
-
- _Desdemona._ So would not I: my love doth so approve him,
- That even his stubbornness, his checks, his frowns,
- Have grace and favour in them,’ etc.
-
-Not the unjust suspicions of Othello, not Iago’s unprovoked treachery,
-place Desdemona in a more amiable or interesting light than the
-conversation (half earnest, half jest) between her and Æmilia on the
-common behaviour of women to their husbands. This dialogue takes place
-just before the last fatal scene. If Othello had overheard it, it would
-have prevented the whole catastrophe; but then it would have spoiled the
-play.
-
-The character of Iago is one of the supererogations of Shakespear’s
-genius. Some persons, more nice than wise, have thought this whole
-character unnatural, because his villainy is _without a sufficient
-motive_. Shakespear, who was as good a philosopher as he was a poet,
-thought otherwise. He knew that the love of power, which is another name
-for the love of mischief, is natural to man. He would know this as well
-or better than if it had been demonstrated to him by a logical diagram,
-merely from seeing children paddle in the dirt or kill flies for sport.
-Iago in fact belongs to a class of character, common to Shakespear and
-at the same time peculiar to him; whose heads are as acute and active as
-their hearts are hard and callous. Iago is to be sure an extreme
-instance of the kind; that is to say, of diseased intellectual activity,
-with the most perfect indifference to moral good or evil, or rather with
-a decided preference of the latter, because it falls more readily in
-with his favourite propensity, gives greater zest to his thoughts and
-scope to his actions. He is quite or nearly as indifferent to his own
-fate as to that of others; he runs all risks for a trifling and doubtful
-advantage; and is himself the dupe and victim of his ruling passion—an
-insatiable craving after action of the most difficult and dangerous
-kind. ‘Our ancient’ is a philosopher, who fancies that a lie that kills
-has more point in it than an alliteration or an antithesis; who thinks a
-fatal experiment on the peace of a family a better thing than watching
-the palpitations in the heart of a flea in a microscope; who plots the
-ruin of his friends as an exercise for his ingenuity, and stabs men in
-the dark to prevent _ennui_. His gaiety, such as it is, arises from the
-success of his treachery; his ease from the torture he has inflicted on
-others. He is an amateur of tragedy in real life; and instead of
-employing his invention on imaginary characters, or long-forgotten
-incidents, he takes the bolder and more desperate course of getting up
-his plot at home, casts the principal parts among his nearest friends
-and connections, and rehearses it in downright earnest, with steady
-nerves and unabated resolution. We will just give an illustration or
-two.
-
-One of his most characteristic speeches is that immediately after the
-marriage of Othello.
-
- ‘_Roderigo._ What a full fortune does the thick lips owe,
- If he can carry her thus!
-
- _Iago._ Call up her father:
- Rouse him (_Othello_) make after him, poison his delight,
- Proclaim him in the streets, incense her kinsmen,
- And tho’ he in a fertile climate dwell,
- Plague him with flies: tho’ that his joy be joy,
- Yet throw such changes of vexation on it,
- As it may lose some colour.’
-
-In the next passage, his imagination runs riot in the mischief he is
-plotting, and breaks out into the wildness and impetuosity of real
-enthusiasm.
-
- ‘_Roderigo._ Here is her father’s house: I’ll call aloud.
-
- _Iago._ Do, with like timourous accent and dire yell
- As when, by night and negligence, the fire
- Is spied in populous cities.’
-
-One of his most favourite topics, on which he is rich indeed, and in
-descanting on which his spleen serves him for a Muse, is the
-disproportionate match between Desdemona and the Moor. This is a clue to
-the character of the lady which he is by no means ready to part with. It
-is brought forward in the first scene, and he recurs to it, when in
-answer to his insinuations against Desdemona, Roderigo says,
-
- ‘I cannot believe that in her—she’s full of most blest conditions.
-
- _Iago._ Bless’d fig’s end. The wine she drinks is made of grapes. If
- she had been blest, she would never have married the Moor.’
-
-And again with still more spirit and fatal effect afterwards, when he
-turns this very suggestion arising in Othello’s own breast to her
-prejudice.
-
- ‘_Othello._ And yet how nature erring from itself—
-
- _Iago._ Ay, there’s the point;—as to be bold with you,
- Not to affect many proposed matches
- Of her own clime, complexion, and degree,’ etc.
-
-This is probing to the quick. Iago here turns the character of poor
-Desdemona, as it were, inside out. It is certain that nothing but the
-genius of Shakespear could have preserved the entire interest and
-delicacy of the part, and have even drawn an additional elegance and
-dignity from the peculiar circumstances in which she is placed.—The
-habitual licentiousness of Iago’s conversation is not to be traced to
-the pleasure he takes in gross or lascivious images, but to his desire
-of finding out the worst side of everything, and of proving himself an
-over-match for appearances. He has none of ‘the milk of human kindness’
-in his composition. His imagination rejects every thing that has not a
-strong infusion of the most unpalatable ingredients; his mind digests
-only poisons. Virtue or goodness or whatever has the least ‘relish of
-salvation in it,’ is, to his depraved appetite, sickly and insipid: and
-he even resents the good opinion entertained of his own integrity, as if
-it were an affront cast on the masculine sense and spirit of his
-character. Thus at the meeting between Othello and Desdemona, he
-exclaims—‘Oh, you are well tuned now: but I’ll set down the pegs that
-make this music, _as honest as I am_‘—his character of _bonhomme_ not
-sitting at all easy upon him. In the scenes, where he tries to work
-Othello to his purpose, he is proportionably guarded, insidious, dark,
-and deliberate. We believe nothing ever came up to the profound
-dissimulation and dextrous artifice of the well-known dialogue in the
-third act, where he first enters upon the execution of his design.
-
- ‘_Iago._ My noble lord.
-
- _Othello._ What dost thou say, Iago?
-
- _Iago._ Did Michael Cassio,
- When you woo’d my lady, know of your love?
-
- _Othello._ He did from first to last.
- Why dost thou ask?
-
- _Iago._ But for a satisfaction of my thought,
- No further harm.
-
- _Othello._ Why of thy thought, Iago?
-
- _Iago._ I did not think he had been acquainted with it.
-
- _Othello._ O yes, and went between us very oft—
-
- _Iago._ Indeed!
-
- _Othello._ Indeed? Ay, indeed. Discern’st thou aught of that?
- Is he not honest?
-
- _Iago._ Honest, my lord?
-
- _Othello._ Honest? Ay, honest.
-
- _Iago._ My lord, for aught I know.
-
- _Othello._ What do’st thou think?
-
- _Iago._ Think, my lord!
-
- _Othello._ Think, my lord! Alas, thou echo’st me,
- As if there was some monster in thy thought
- Too hideous to be shewn.’—
-
-The stops and breaks, the deep workings of treachery under the mask of
-love and honesty, the anxious watchfulness, the cool earnestness, and if
-we may so say, the _passion_ of hypocrisy, marked in every line, receive
-their last finishing in that inconceivable burst of pretended
-indignation at Othello’s doubts of his sincerity.
-
- ‘O grace! O Heaven forgive me!
- Are you a man? Have you a soul or sense?
- God be wi’ you; take mine office. O wretched fool,
- That lov’st to make thine honesty a vice!
- Oh monstrous world! Take note, take note, O world!
- To be direct and honest, is not safe.
- I thank you for this profit, and from hence
- I’ll love no friend, since love breeds such offence.’
-
-If Iago is detestable enough when he has business on his hands and all
-his engines at work, he is still worse when he has nothing to do, and we
-only see into the hollowness of his heart. His indifference when Othello
-falls into a swoon, is perfectly diabolical.
-
- ‘_Iago._ How is it, General? Have you not hurt your head?
-
- _Othello._ Do’st thou mock me?
-
- _Iago._ I mock you not, by Heaven,’ etc.
-
-The part indeed would hardly be tolerated, even as a foil to the virtue
-and generosity of the other characters in the play, but for its
-indefatigable industry and inexhaustible resources, which divert the
-attention of the spectator (as well as his own) from the end he has in
-view to the means by which it must be accomplished.—Edmund the Bastard
-in _Lear_ is something of the same character, placed in less prominent
-circumstances. Zanga is a vulgar caricature of it.
-
-
- TIMON OF ATHENS
-
-TIMON OF ATHENS always appeared to us to be written with as intense a
-feeling of his subject as any one play of Shakespear. It is one of the
-few in which he seems to be in earnest throughout, never to trifle nor
-go out of his way. He does not relax in his efforts, nor lose sight of
-the unity of his design. It is the only play of our author in which
-spleen is the predominant feeling of the mind. It is as much a satire as
-a play: and contains some of the finest pieces of invective possible to
-be conceived, both in the snarling, captious answers of the cynic
-Apemantus, and in the impassioned and more terrible imprecations of
-Timon. The latter remind the classical reader of the force and swelling
-impetuosity of the moral declamations in _Juvenal_, while the former
-have all the keenness and caustic severity of the old Stoic
-philosophers. The soul of Diogenes appears to have been seated on the
-lips of Apemantus. The churlish profession of misanthropy in the cynic
-is contrasted with the profound feeling of it in Timon, and also with
-the soldier-like and determined resentment of Alcibiades against his
-countrymen, who have banished him, though this forms only an incidental
-episode in the tragedy.
-
-The fable consists of a single event;—of the transition from the highest
-pomp and profusion of artificial refinement to the most abject state of
-savage life, and privation of all social intercourse. The change is as
-rapid as it is complete; nor is the description of the rich and generous
-Timon, banqueting in gilded palaces, pampered by every luxury, prodigal
-of his hospitality, courted by crowds of flatterers, poets, painters,
-lords, ladies, who—
-
- ‘Follow his strides, his lobbies fill with tendance,
- Rain sacrificial whisperings in his ear;
- And through him drink the free air’—
-
-more striking than that of the sudden falling off of his friends and
-fortune, and his naked exposure in a wild forest digging roots from the
-earth for his sustenance, with a lofty spirit of self-denial, and bitter
-scorn of the world, which raise him higher in our esteem than the
-dazzling gloss of prosperity could do. He grudges himself the means of
-life, and is only busy in preparing his grave. How forcibly is the
-difference between what he was, and what he is, described in Apemantus’s
-taunting questions, when he comes to reproach him with the change in his
-way of life!
-
- ——‘What, think’st thou,
- That the bleak air, thy boisterous chamberlain,
- Will put thy shirt on warm? will these moist trees
- That have outlived the eagle, page thy heels,
- And skip when thou point’st out? will the cold brook,
- Candied with ice, caudle thy morning taste
- To cure thy o’er-night’s surfeit? Call the creatures,
- Whose naked natures live in all the spight
- Of wreakful heav’n, whose bare unhoused trunks,
- To the conflicting elements expos’d,
- Answer mere nature, bid them flatter thee.’
-
-The manners are every where preserved with distinct truth. The poet and
-painter are very skilfully played off against one another, both
-affecting great attention to the other, and each taken up with his own
-vanity, and the superiority of his own art. Shakespear has put into the
-mouth of the former a very lively description of the genius of poetry
-and of his own in particular.
-
- ——‘A thing slipt idly from me.
- Our poesy is as a gum, which issues
- From whence ’tis nourish’d. The fire i’ th’ flint
- Shews not till it be struck: our gentle flame
- Provokes itself—and like the current flies
- Each bound it chafes.’
-
-The hollow friendship and shuffling evasions of the Athenian lords,
-their smooth professions and pitiful ingratitude, are very
-satisfactorily exposed, as well as the different disguises to which the
-meanness of self-love resorts in such cases to hide a want of generosity
-and good faith. The lurking selfishness of Apemantus does not pass
-undetected amidst the grossness of his sarcasms and his contempt for the
-pretensions of others. Even the two courtezans who accompany Alcibiades
-to the cave of Timon are very characteristically sketched; and the
-thieves who come to visit him are also ‘true men’ in their way.—An
-exception to this general picture of selfish depravity is found in the
-old and honest steward Flavius, to whom Timon pays a full tribute of
-tenderness. Shakespear was unwilling to draw a picture ‘_ugly all over
-with hypocrisy_.’ He owed this character to the good-natured
-solicitations of his Muse. His mind might well have been said to be the
-‘sphere of humanity.’
-
-The moral sententiousness of this play equals that of Lord Bacon’s
-Treatise on the Wisdom of the Ancients, and is indeed seasoned with
-greater variety. Every topic of contempt or indignation is here
-exhausted; but while the sordid licentiousness of Apemantus, which turns
-every thing to gall and bitterness, shews only the natural virulence of
-his temper and antipathy to good or evil alike, Timon does not utter an
-imprecation without betraying the extravagant workings of disappointed
-passion, of love altered to hate. Apemantus sees nothing good in any
-object, and exaggerates whatever is disgusting: Timon is tormented with
-the perpetual contrast between things and appearances, between the
-fresh, tempting outside and the rottenness within, and invokes mischiefs
-on the heads of mankind proportioned to the sense of his wrongs and of
-their treacheries. He impatiently cries out, when he finds the gold,
-
- ‘This yellow slave
- Will knit and break religions; bless the accurs’d;
- Make the hoar leprosy ador’d; place thieves,
- And give them title, knee, and approbation,
- With senators on the bench; this is it,
- That makes the wappen’d widow wed again;
- She, whom the spital-house
- Would cast the gorge at, _this embalms and spices
- To th’ April day again_.’
-
-One of his most dreadful imprecations is that which occurs immediately
-on his leaving Athens.
-
- ‘Let me look back upon thee, O thou wall,
- That girdlest in those wolves! Dive in the earth,
- And fence not Athens! Matrons, turn incontinent;
- Obedience fail in children; slaves and fools
- Pluck the grave wrinkled senate from the bench,
- And minister in their steads. To general filths
- Convert o’ th’ instant green virginity!
- Do ‘t in your parents’ eyes. Bankrupts, hold fast;
- Rather than render back, out with your knives,
- And cut your trusters’ throats! Bound servants, steal:
- Large-handed robbers your grave masters are
- And pill by law. Maid, to thy master’s bed:
- Thy mistress is o’ th’ brothel. Son of sixteen,
- Pluck the lin’d crutch from thy old limping sire,
- And with it beat his brains out! Fear and piety,
- Religion to the Gods, peace, justice, truth,
- Domestic awe, night-rest, and neighbourhood,
- Instructions, manners, mysteries and trades,
- Degrees, observances, customs and laws,
- Decline to your confounding contraries;
- And let confusion live!—Plagues, incident to men,
- Your potent and infectious fevers heap
- On Athens, ripe for stroke! Thou cold sciatica,
- Cripple our senators, that their limbs may halt
- As lamely as their manners! Lust and liberty
- Creep in the minds and marrows of our youth,
- That ‘gainst the stream of virtue they may strive,
- And drown themselves in riot! Itches, blains,
- Sow all th’ Athenian bosoms; and their crop
- Be general leprosy: breath infect breath,
- That their society (as their friendship) may
- Be merely poison!’
-
-Timon is here just as ideal in his passion for ill as he had been before
-in his belief of good, Apemantus was satisfied with the mischief
-existing in the world, and with his own ill-nature. One of the most
-decisive intimations of Timon’s morbid jealousy of appearances is in his
-answer to Apemantus, who asks him,
-
- ‘What things in the world can’st thou nearest compare with thy
- flatterers?
-
- _Timon._ Women nearest: but men, men are the things themselves.’
-
-Apemantus, it is said, ‘loved few things better than to abhor himself.’
-This is not the case with Timon, who neither loves to abhor himself nor
-others. All his vehement misanthropy is forced, up-hill work. From the
-slippery turns of fortune, from the turmoils of passion and adversity,
-he wishes to sink into the quiet of the grave. On that subject his
-thoughts are intent, on that he finds time and place to grow romantic.
-He digs his own grave by the sea-shore; contrives his funeral ceremonies
-amidst the pomp of desolation, and builds his mausoleum of the elements.
-
- ‘Come not to me again; but say to Athens,
- Timon hath made his everlasting mansion
- Upon the beached verge of the salt flood;
- Which once a-day with his embossed froth
- The turbulent surge shall cover.—Thither come,
- And let my grave-stone be your oracle.’
-
-And again, Alcibiades, after reading his epitaph, says of him,
-
- ‘These well express in thee thy latter spirits:
- Though thou abhorred’st in us our human griefs,
- Scorn’d’st our brain’s flow, and those our droplets, which
- From niggard nature fall; yet rich conceit
- Taught thee to make vast Neptune weep for aye
- On thy low grave’——
-
-thus making the winds his funeral dirge, his mourner the murmuring
-ocean; and seeking in the everlasting solemnities of nature oblivion of
-the transitory splendour of his life-time.
-
-
- CORIOLANUS
-
-Shakespear has in this play shewn himself well versed in history and
-state-affairs. CORIOLANUS is a storehouse of political common-places.
-Any one who studies it may save himself the trouble of reading Burke’s
-Reflections, or Paine’s Rights of Man, or the Debates in both Houses of
-Parliament since the French Revolution or our own. The arguments for and
-against aristocracy or democracy, on the privileges of the few and the
-claims of the many, on liberty and slavery, power and the abuse of it,
-peace and war, are here very ably handled, with the spirit of a poet and
-the acuteness of a philosopher. Shakespear himself seems to have had a
-leaning to the arbitrary side of the question, perhaps from some feeling
-of contempt for his own origin; and to have spared no occasion of
-baiting the rabble. What he says of them is very true: what he says of
-their betters is also very true, though he dwells less upon it.—The
-cause of the people is indeed but little calculated as a subject for
-poetry: it admits of rhetoric, which goes into argument and explanation,
-but it presents no immediate or distinct images to the mind, ‘no jutting
-frieze, buttress, or coigne of vantage’ for poetry ‘to make its pendant
-bed and procreant cradle in.’ The language of poetry naturally falls in
-with the language of power. The imagination is an exaggerating and
-exclusive faculty: it takes from one thing to add to another: it
-accumulates circumstances together to give the greatest possible effect
-to a favourite object. The understanding is a dividing and measuring
-faculty: it judges of things not according to their immediate impression
-on the mind, but according to their relations to one another. The one is
-a monopolising faculty, which seeks the greatest quantity of present
-excitement by inequality and disproportion; the other is a distributive
-faculty, which seeks the greatest quantity of ultimate good, by justice
-and proportion. The one is an aristocratical, the other a republican
-faculty. The principle of poetry is a very anti-levelling principle. It
-aims at effect, it exists by contrast. It admits of no medium. It is
-every thing by excess. It rises above the ordinary standard of
-sufferings and crimes. It presents a dazzling appearance. It shows its
-head turreted, crowned, and crested. Its front is gilt and
-blood-stained. Before it ‘it carries noise, and behind it leaves tears.’
-It has its altars and its victims, sacrifices, human sacrifices. Kings,
-priests, nobles, are its train-bearers, tyrants and slaves its
-executioners.—‘Carnage is its daughter.’—Poetry is right-royal. It puts
-the individual for the species, the one above the infinite many, might
-before right. A lion hunting a flock of sheep or a herd of wild asses is
-a more poetical object than they; and we even take part with the lordly
-beast, because our vanity or some other feeling makes us disposed to
-place ourselves in the situation of the strongest party. So we feel some
-concern for the poor citizens of Rome when they meet together to compare
-their wants and grievances, till Coriolanus comes in and with blows and
-big words drives this set of ‘poor rats,’ this rascal scum, to their
-homes and beggary before him. There is nothing heroical in a multitude
-of miserable rogues not wishing to be starved, or complaining that they
-are like to be so: but when a single man comes forward to brave their
-cries and to make them submit to the last indignities, from mere pride
-and self-will, our admiration of his prowess is immediately converted
-into contempt for their pusillanimity. The insolence of power is
-stronger than the plea of necessity. The tame submission to usurped
-authority or even the natural resistance to it has nothing to excite or
-flatter the imagination: it is the assumption of a right to insult or
-oppress others that carries an imposing air of superiority with it. We
-had rather be the oppressor than the oppressed. The love of power in
-ourselves and the admiration of it in others are both natural to man:
-the one makes him a tyrant, the other a slave. Wrong dressed out in
-pride, pomp, and circumstance, has more attraction than abstract
-right.—Coriolanus complains of the fickleness of the people: yet, the
-instant he cannot gratify his pride and obstinacy at their expense, he
-turns his arms against his country. If his country was not worth
-defending, why did he build his pride on its defence? He is a conqueror
-and a hero; he conquers other countries, and makes this a plea for
-enslaving his own; and when he is prevented from doing so, he leagues
-with its enemies to destroy his country. He rates the people ‘as if he
-were a God to punish, and not a man of their infirmity.’ He scoffs at
-one of their tribunes for maintaining their rights and franchises: ‘Mark
-you his absolute _shall_?’ not marking his own absolute _will_ to take
-every thing from them, his impatience of the slightest opposition to his
-own pretensions being in proportion to their arrogance and absurdity. If
-the great and powerful had the beneficence and wisdom of Gods, then all
-this would have been well: if with a greater knowledge of what is good
-for the people, they had as great a care for their interest as they have
-themselves, if they were seated above the world, sympathising with the
-welfare, but not feeling the passions of men, receiving neither good nor
-hurt from them, but bestowing their benefits as free gifts on them, they
-might then rule over them like another Providence. But this is not the
-case. Coriolanus is unwilling that the senate should shew their ‘cares’
-for the people, lest their ‘cares’ should be construed into ‘fears,’ to
-the subversion of all due authority; and he is no sooner disappointed in
-his schemes to deprive the people not only of the cares of the state,
-but of all power to redress themselves, than Volumnia is made madly to
-exclaim,
-
- ‘Now the red pestilence strike all trades in Rome,
- And occupations perish.’
-
-This is but natural: it is but natural for a mother to have more regard
-for her son than for a whole city; but then the city should be left to
-take some care of itself. The care of the state cannot, we here see, be
-safely entrusted to maternal affection, or to the domestic charities of
-high life. The great have private feelings of their own, to which the
-interests of humanity and justice must courtesy. Their interests are so
-far from being the same as those of the community, that they are in
-direct and necessary opposition to them; their power is at the expense
-of _our_ weakness; their riches of _our_ poverty; their pride of _our_
-degradation; their splendour of _our_ wretchedness; their tyranny of
-_our_ servitude. If they had the superior knowledge ascribed to them
-(which they have not) it would only render them so much more formidable;
-and from Gods would convert them into Devils. The whole dramatic moral
-of CORIOLANUS is that those who have little shall have less, and that
-those who have much shall take all that others have left. The people are
-poor; therefore they ought to be starved. They are slaves; therefore
-they ought to be beaten. They work hard; therefore they ought to be
-treated like beasts of burden. They are ignorant; therefore they ought
-not to be allowed to feel that they want food, or clothing, or rest,
-that they are enslaved, oppressed, and miserable. This is the logic of
-the imagination and the passions; which seek to aggrandize what excites
-admiration and to heap contempt on misery, to raise power into tyranny,
-and to make tyranny absolute; to thrust down that which is low still
-lower, and to make wretches desperate: to exalt magistrates into kings,
-kings into gods; to degrade subjects to the rank of slaves, and slaves
-to the condition of brutes. The history of mankind is a romance, a mask,
-a tragedy, constructed upon the principles of _poetical justice_; it is
-a noble or royal hunt, in which what is sport to the few is death to the
-many, and in which the spectators halloo and encourage the strong to set
-upon the weak, and cry havoc in the chase though they do not share in
-the spoil. We may depend upon it that what men delight to read in books,
-they will put in practice in reality.
-
-One of the most natural traits in this play is the difference of the
-interest taken in the success of Coriolanus by his wife and mother. The
-one is only anxious for his honour; the other is fearful for his life.
-
- ‘_Volumnia._ Methinks I hither hear your husband’s drum:
- I see him pluck Aufidius down by th’ hair:
- Methinks I see him stamp thus—and call thus—
- Come on, ye cowards; ye were got in fear
- Though you were born in Rome; his bloody brow
- With his mail’d hand then wiping, forth he goes
- Like to a harvest man, that’s task’d to mow
- Or all, or lose his hire.
-
- _Virgilia._ His bloody brow! Oh Jupiter, no blood.
-
- _Volumnia._ Away, you fool; it more becomes a man
- Than gilt his trophy. The breast of Hecuba,
- When she did suckle Hector, look’d not lovelier
- Than Hector’s forehead, when it spit forth blood
- At Grecian swords contending.’
-
-When she hears the trumpets that proclaim her son’s return, she says in
-the true spirit of a Roman matron,
-
- ‘These are the ushers of Martius: before him
- He carries noise, and behind him he leaves tears.
- Death, that dark spirit, in ‘s nervy arm doth lie,
- Which being advanc’d, declines, and then men die.’
-
-Coriolanus himself is a complete character: his love of reputation, his
-contempt of popular opinion, his pride and modesty, are consequences of
-each other. His pride consists in the inflexible sternness of his will;
-his love of glory is a determined desire to bear down all opposition,
-and to extort the admiration both of friends and foes. His contempt for
-popular favour, his unwillingness to hear his own praises, spring from
-the same source. He cannot contradict the praises that are bestowed upon
-him; therefore he is impatient at hearing them. He would enforce the
-good opinion of others by his actions, but does not want their
-acknowledgments in words.
-
- ‘Pray now, no more: my mother,
- Who has a charter to extol her blood,
- When she does praise me, grieves me.’
-
-His magnanimity is of the same kind. He admires in an enemy that courage
-which he honours in himself; he places himself on the hearth of Aufidius
-with the same confidence that he would have met him in the field, and
-feels that by putting himself in his power, he takes from him all
-temptation for using it against him.
-
-In the title-page of CORIOLANUS, it is said at the bottom of the
-_Dramatis Personæ_, ‘The whole history exactly followed, and many of the
-principal speeches copied from the life of Coriolanus in Plutarch.’ It
-will be interesting to our readers to see how far this is the case. Two
-of the principal scenes, those between Coriolanus and Aufidius and
-between Coriolanus and his mother, are thus given in Sir Thomas North’s
-Translation of Plutarch, dedicated to Queen Elizabeth, 1579. The first
-is as follows:—
-
- ‘It was even twilight when he entered the city of Antium, and many
- people met him in the streets, but no man knew him. So he went
- directly to Tullus Aufidius’ house, and when he came thither, he got
- him up straight to the chimney-hearth, and sat him down, and spake
- not a word to any man, his face all muffled over. They of the house
- spying him, wondered what he should be, and yet they durst not bid
- him rise. For ill-favouredly muffled and disguised as he was, yet
- there appeared a certain majesty in his countenance and in his
- silence: whereupon they went to Tullus, who was at supper, to tell
- him of the strange disguising of this man. Tullus rose presently
- from the board, and coming towards him, asked him what he was, and
- wherefore he came. Then Martius unmuffled himself, and after he had
- paused awhile, making no answer, he said unto himself, If thou
- knowest me not yet, Tullus, and seeing me, dost not perhaps believe
- me to be the man I am indeed, I must of necessity discover myself to
- be that I am. “I am Caius Martius, who hath done to thyself
- particularly, and to all the Volces generally, great hurt and
- mischief, which I cannot deny for my surname of Coriolanus that I
- bear. For I never had other benefit nor recompence of the true and
- painful service I have done, and the extreme dangers I have been in,
- but this only surname: a good memory and witness of the malice and
- displeasure thou shouldest bear me. Indeed the name only remaineth
- with me; for the rest, the envy and cruelty of the people of Rome
- have taken from me, by the sufferance of the dastardly nobility and
- magistrates, who have forsaken me, and let me be banished by the
- people. This extremity hath now driven me to come as a poor suitor,
- to take thy chimney-hearth, not of any hope I have to save my life
- thereby. For if I had feared death, I would not have come hither to
- put myself in hazard; but pricked forward with desire to be revenged
- of them that thus have banished me, which now I do begin, in putting
- my person into the hands of their enemies. Wherefore if thou hast
- any heart to be wrecked of the injuries thy enemies have done thee,
- speed thee now, and let my misery serve thy turn, and so use it as
- my service may be a benefit to the Volces: promising thee, that I
- will fight with better good will for all you, than I did when I was
- against you, knowing that they fight more valiantly who know the
- force of the enemy, than such as have never proved it. And if it be
- so that thou dare not, and that thou art weary to prove fortune any
- more, then am I also weary to live any longer. And it were no wisdom
- in thee to save the life of him who hath been heretofore thy mortal
- enemy, and whose service now can nothing help, nor pleasure thee.”
- Tullus hearing what he said, was a marvellous glad man, and taking
- him by the hand, he said unto him: “Stand up, O Martius, and be of
- good cheer, for in proffering thyself unto us, thou doest us great
- honour: and by this means thou mayest hope also of greater things at
- all the Volces’ hands.” So he feasted him for that time, and
- entertained him in the honourablest manner he could, talking with
- him of no other matter at that present: but within few days after,
- they fell to consultation together in what sort they should begin
- their wars.’
-
-The meeting between Coriolanus and his mother is also nearly the same as
-in the play.
-
- ‘Now was Martius set then in the chair of state, with all the
- honours of a general, and when he had spied the women coming afar
- off, he marvelled what the matter meant: but afterwards knowing his
- wife which came foremost, he determined at the first to persist in
- his obstinate and inflexible rancour. But overcome in the end with
- natural affection, and being altogether altered to see them, his
- heart would not serve him to tarry their coming to his chair, but
- coming down in haste, he went to meet them, and first he kissed his
- mother, and embraced her a pretty while, then his wife and little
- children. And nature so wrought with him, that the tears fell from
- his eyes, and he could not keep himself from making much of them,
- but yielded to the affection of his blood, as if he had been
- violently carried with the fury of a most swift-running stream.
- After he had thus lovingly received them, and perceiving that his
- mother Volumnia would begin to speak to him, he called the chiefest
- of the council of the Volces to hear what she would say. Then she
- spake in this sort: “If we held our peace, my son, and determined
- not to speak, the state of our poor bodies, and present sight of our
- raiment, would easily betray to thee what life we have led at home,
- since thy exile and abode abroad; but think now with thyself, how
- much more unfortunate than all the women living, we are come hither,
- considering that the sight which should be most pleasant to all
- others to behold, spiteful fortune had made most fearful to us:
- making myself to see my son, and my daughter here her husband,
- besieging the walls of his native country: so as that which is the
- only comfort to all others in their adversity and misery, to pray
- unto the Gods, and to call to them for aid, is the only thing which
- plungeth us into most deep perplexity. For we cannot, alas, together
- pray, both for victory to our country, and for safety of thy life
- also: but a world of grievous curses, yea more than any mortal enemy
- can heap upon us, are forcibly wrapped up in our prayers. For the
- bitter sop of most hard choice is offered thy wife and children, to
- forego one of the two: either to lose the person of thyself, or the
- nurse of their native country. For myself, my son, I am determined
- not to tarry till fortune in my lifetime do make an end of this war.
- For if I cannot persuade thee rather to do good unto both parties,
- than to overthrow and destroy the one, preferring love and nature
- before the malice and calamity of wars, thou shalt see, my son, and
- trust unto it, thou shalt no sooner march forward to assault thy
- country, but thy foot shall tread upon thy mother’s womb, that
- brought thee first into this world. And I may not defer to see the
- day, either that my son be led prisoner in triumph by his natural
- countrymen, or that he himself do triumph of them, and of his
- natural country. For if it were so, that my request tended to save
- thy country, in destroying the Volces, I must confess, thou wouldest
- hardly and doubtfully resolve on that. For as to destroy thy natural
- country, it is altogether unmeet and unlawful, so were it not just
- and less honourable to betray those that put their trust in thee.
- But my only demand consisteth, to make a goal delivery of all evils,
- which delivereth equal benefit and safety, both to the one and the
- other, but most honourable for the Volces. For it shall appear, that
- having victory in their hands, they have of special favour granted
- us singular graces, peace and amity, albeit themselves have no less
- part of both than we. Of which good, if so it came to pass, thyself
- is the only author, and so hast thou the only honour. But if it
- fail, and fall out contrary, thyself alone deservedly shalt carry
- the shameful reproach and burthen of either party. So, though the
- end of war be uncertain, yet this notwithstanding is most certain,
- that if it be thy chance to conquer, this benefit shalt thou reap of
- thy goodly conquest, to be chronicled the plague and destroyer of
- thy country. And if fortune overthrow thee, then the world will say,
- that through desire to revenge thy private injuries, thou hast for
- ever undone thy good friends, who did most lovingly and courteously
- receive thee.” Martius gave good ear unto his mother’s words,
- without interrupting her speech at all, and after she had said what
- she would, he held his peace a pretty while, and answered not a
- word. Hereupon she began again to speak unto him, and said: “My son,
- why dost thou not answer me? Dost thou think it good altogether to
- give place unto thy choler and desire of revenge, and thinkest thou
- it not honesty for thee to grant thy mother’s request in so weighty
- a cause? Dost thou take it honourable for a nobleman to remember the
- wrongs and injuries done him, and dost not in like case think it an
- honest nobleman’s part to be thankful for the goodness that parents
- do shew to their children, acknowledging the duty and reverence they
- ought to bear unto them? No man living is more bound to shew himself
- thankful in all parts and respects than thyself; who so universally
- shewest all ingratitude. Moreover, my son, thou hast sorely taken of
- thy country, exacting grievous payments upon them, in revenge of the
- injuries offered thee; besides, thou hast not hitherto shewed thy
- poor mother any courtesy. And therefore, it is not only honest but
- due unto me, that without compulsion I should obtain my so just and
- reasonable request of thee. But since by reason I cannot persuade
- thee to it, to what purpose do I defer my last hope.” And with these
- words, herself, his wife and children, fell down upon their knees
- before him: Martius seeing that, could refrain no longer, but went
- straight and lifted her up, crying out, “Oh mother, what have you
- done to me?” And holding her hard by the hand, “Oh mother,” said he,
- “you have won a happy victory for your country, but mortal and
- unhappy for your son: for I see myself vanquished by you alone.”
- These words being spoken openly, he spake a little apart with his
- mother and wife, and then let them return again to Rome, for so they
- did request him; and so remaining in the camp that night, the next
- morning he dislodged, and marched homeward unto the Volces’ country
- again.’
-
-Shakespear has, in giving a dramatic form to this passage, adhered very
-closely and properly to the text. He did not think it necessary to
-improve upon the truth of nature. Several of the scenes in _Julius
-Cæsar_, particularly Portia’s appeal to the confidence of her husband by
-shewing him the wound she had given herself, and the appearance of the
-ghost of Cæsar to Brutus, are in like manner, taken from the history.
-
-
- TROILUS AND CRESSIDA
-
-This is one of the most loose and desultory of our author’s plays: it
-rambles on just as it happens, but it overtakes, together with some
-indifferent matter, a prodigious number of fine things in its way.
-Troilus himself is no character: he is merely a common lover: but
-Cressida and her uncle Pandarus are hit off with proverbial truth. By
-the speeches given to the leaders of the Grecian host, Nestor, Ulysses,
-Agamemnon, Achilles, Shakespear seems to have known them as well as if
-he had been a spy sent by the Trojans into the enemy’s camp—to say
-nothing of their affording very lofty examples of didactic eloquence.
-The following is a very stately and spirited declamation:
-
- ‘_Ulysses._ Troy, yet upon her basis, had been down,
- And the great Hector’s sword had lack’d a master,
- But for these instances.
- The specialty of rule hath been neglected.
-
- . . . . .
-
- The heavens themselves, the planets, and this center,
- Observe degree, priority, and place,
- Insisture, course, proportion, season, form,
- Office, and custom, in all line of order:
- And therefore is the glorious planet, Sol,
- In noble eminence, enthron’d and spher’d
- Amidst the other, whose med’cinable eye
- Corrects the ill aspects of planets evil,
- And posts, like the commandment of a king,
- Sans check, to good and bad. But, when the planets,
- In evil mixture to disorder wander,
- What plagues, and what portents? what mutinies?
- What raging of the sea? shaking of the earth?
- Commotion in the winds? frights, changes, horrors,
- Divert and crack, rend and deracinate
- The unity and married calm of states
- Quite from their fixture! O, when degree is shaken,
- (Which is the ladder to all high designs)
- The enterprize is sick! How could communities,
- Degrees in schools, and brotherhoods in cities,
- Peaceful commerce from dividable shores,
- The primogenitive and due of birth,
- Prerogative of age, crowns, sceptres, laurels,
- (But by degree) stand in authentic place?
- Take but degree away, untune that string,
- And hark what discord follows! each thing meets
- In mere oppugnancy. The bounded waters
- Would lift their bosoms higher than the shores,
- And make a sop of all this solid globe:
- Strength would be the lord of imbecility,
- And the rude son would strike his father dead:
- Force would be right; or rather right and wrong
- (Between whose endless jar Justice resides)
- Would lose their names, and so would Justice too.
- Then every thing includes itself in power,
- Power into will, will into appetite;
- And appetite (an universal wolf,
- So doubly seconded with will and power)
- Must make perforce an universal prey,
- And last eat up himself. Great Agamemnon,
- This chaos, when degree is suffocate,
- Follows the choking:
- And this neglection of degree it is,
- That by a pace goes backward, in a purpose
- It hath to climb. The general’s disdained
- By him one step below; he, by the next;
- That next, by him beneath: so every step,
- Exampled by the first pace that is sick
- Of his superior, grows to an envious fever
- Of pale and bloodless emulation;
- And ’tis this fever that keeps Troy on foot,
- Not her own sinews. To end a tale of length,
- Troy in our weakness lives, not in her strength.’
-
-It cannot be said of Shakespear, as was said of some one, that he was
-‘without o’erflowing full.’ He was full, even to o’erflowing. He gave
-heaped measure, running over. This was his greatest fault. He was only
-in danger ‘of losing distinction in his thoughts’ (to borrow his own
-expression)
-
- ‘As doth a battle when they charge on heaps
- The enemy flying.’
-
-There is another passage, the speech of Ulysses to Achilles, shewing him
-the thankless nature of popularity, which has a still greater depth of
-moral observation and richness of illustration than the former. It is
-long, but worth the quoting. The sometimes giving an entire argument
-from the unacted plays of our author may with one class of readers have
-almost the use of restoring a lost passage; and may serve to convince
-another class of critics, that the poet’s genius was not confined to the
-production of stage effect by preternatural means.—
-
- ‘_Ulysses._ Time hath, my lord, a wallet at his back,
- Wherein he puts alms for Oblivion;
- A great-siz’d monster of ingratitudes:
- Those scraps are good deeds past,
- Which are devour’d as fast as they are made,
- Forgot as soon as done. Persev`rance, dear my lord,
- Keeps Honour bright: to have done, is to hang
- Quite out of fashion, like a rusty mail
- In monumental mockery. Take the instant way;
- For Honour travels in a strait so narrow,
- Where one but goes abreast; keep then the path,
- For Emulation hath a thousand sons,
- That one by one pursue; if you give way,
- Or hedge aside from the direct forth right,
- Like to an entered tide, they all rush by,
- And leave you hindmost;——
- Or, like a gallant horse fall’n in first rank,
- O’er-run and trampled on: then what they do in present,
- Tho’ less than yours in past must o’ertop yours:
- For Time is like a fashionable host,
- That slightly shakes his parting guest by th’ hand,
- And with his arms outstretch’d, as he would fly,
- Grasps in the comer: the welcome ever smiles,
- And farewell goes out sighing. O, let not virtue seek
- Remuneration for the thing it was; for beauty, wit,
- High birth, vigour of bone, desert in service,
- Love, friendship, charity, are subjects all
- To envious and calumniating time:
- One touch of nature makes the whole world kin.
- That all with one consent praise new-born gauds,
- Tho’ they are made and moulded of things past.
- The present eye praises the present object.
- Then marvel not, thou great and complete man,
- That all the Greeks begin to worship Ajax;
- Since things in motion sooner catch the eye,
- Than what not stirs. The cry went out on thee,
- And still it might, and yet it may again,
- If thou wouldst not entomb thyself alive,
- And case thy reputation in thy tent.’
-
-The throng of images in the above lines is prodigious; and though they
-sometimes jostle against one another, they every where raise and carry
-on the feeling, which is intrinsically true and profound. The debates
-between the Trojan chiefs on the restoring of Helen are full of
-knowledge of human motives and character. Troilus enters well into the
-philosophy of war, when he says in answer to something that falls from
-Hector,
-
- ‘Why there you touch’d the life of our design:
- Were it not glory that we more affected,
- Than the performance of our heaving spleens,
- I would not wish a drop of Trojan blood
- Spent more in her defence. But, worthy Hector,
- She is a theme of honour and renown,
- A spur to valiant and magnanimous deeds.’
-
-The character of Hector, in a few slight indications which appear of it,
-is made very amiable. His death is sublime, and shews in a striking
-light the mixture of barbarity and heroism of the age. The threats of
-Achilles are fatal; they carry their own means of execution with them.
-
- ‘Come here about me, you my myrmidons,
- Mark what I say.—Attend me where I wheel:
- Strike not a stroke, but keep yourselves in breath;
- And when I have the bloody Hector found,
- Empale him with your weapons round about,
- In fellest manner execute your arms.
- Follow me, sirs, and my proceeding eye.’
-
-He then finds Hector and slays him, as if he had been hunting down a
-wild beast. There is something revolting as well as terrific in the
-ferocious coolness with which he singles out his prey: nor does the
-splendour of the achievement reconcile us to the cruelty of the means.
-
-The characters of Cressida and Pandarus are very amusing and
-instructive. The disinterested willingness of Pandarus to serve his
-friend in an affair which lies next his heart is immediately brought
-forward. ‘Go thy way, Troilus, go thy way; had I a sister were a grace,
-or a daughter were a goddess, he should take his choice. O admirable
-man! Paris, Paris is dirt to him, and I warrant Helen, to change, would
-give money to boot.’ This is the language he addresses to his niece: nor
-is she much behindhand in coming into the plot. Her head is as light and
-fluttering as her heart. ‘It is the prettiest villain, she fetches her
-breath so short as a new-ta’en sparrow.’ Both characters are originals,
-and quite different from what they are in Chaucer. In Chaucer, Cressida
-is represented as a grave, sober, considerate personage (a widow—he
-cannot tell her age, nor whether she has children or no) who has an
-alternate eye to her character, her interest, and her pleasure:
-Shakespear’s Cressida is a giddy girl, an unpractised jilt, who falls in
-love with Troilus, as she afterwards deserts him, from mere levity and
-thoughtlessness of temper. She may be wooed and won to any thing and
-from any thing, at a moment’s warning; the other knows very well what
-she would be at, and sticks to it, and is more governed by substantial
-reasons than by caprice or vanity. Pandarus again, in Chaucer’s story,
-is a friendly sort of go-between, tolerably busy, officious, and forward
-in bringing matters to bear: but in Shakespear he has ‘a stamp exclusive
-and professional’: he wears the badge of his trade; he is a regular
-knight of the game. The difference of the manner in which the subject is
-treated arises perhaps less from intention, than from the different
-genius of the two poets. There is no _double entendre_ in the characters
-of Chaucer: they are either quite serious or quite comic. In Shakespear
-the ludicrous and ironical are constantly blended with the stately and
-the impassioned. We see Chaucer’s characters as they saw themselves, not
-as they appeared to others or might have appeared to the poet. He is as
-deeply implicated in the affairs of his personages as they could be
-themselves. He had to go a long journey with each of them, and became a
-kind of necessary confidant. There is little relief, or light and shade
-in his pictures. The conscious smile is not seen lurking under the brow
-of grief or impatience. Every thing with him is intense and continuous—a
-working out of what went before.—Shakespear never committed himself to
-his characters. He trifled, laughed, or wept with them as he chose. He
-has no prejudices for or against them; and it seems a matter of perfect
-indifference whether he shall be in jest or earnest. According to him
-‘the web of our lives is of a mingled yarn, good and ill together.’ His
-genius was dramatic, as Chaucer’s was historical. He saw both sides of a
-question, the different views taken of it according to the different
-interests of the parties concerned, and he was at once an actor and
-spectator in the scene. If any thing, he is too various and flexible:
-too full of transitions, of glancing lights, of salient points. If
-Chaucer followed up his subject too doggedly, perhaps Shakespear was too
-volatile and heedless. The Muse’s wing too often lifted him from off his
-feet. He made infinite excursions to the right and the left.
-
- ——‘He hath done
- Mad and fantastic execution,
- Engaging and redeeming of himself
- With such a careless force and forceless care,
- As if that luck in very spite of cunning
- Bad him win all.’
-
-Chaucer attended chiefly to the real and natural, that is, to the
-involuntary and inevitable impressions on the mind in given
-circumstances; Shakespear exhibited also the possible and the
-fantastical,—not only what things are in themselves, but whatever they
-might seem to be, their different reflections, their endless
-combinations. He lent his fancy, wit, invention, to others, and borrowed
-their feelings in return. Chaucer excelled in the force of habitual
-sentiment; Shakespear added to it every variety of passion, every
-suggestion of thought or accident. Chaucer described external objects
-with the eye of a painter, or he might be said to have embodied them
-with the hand of a sculptor, every part is so thoroughly made out, and
-tangible:—Shakespear’s imagination threw over them a lustre
-
- —‘Prouder than when blue Iris bends.’
-
-Every thing in Chaucer has a downright reality. A simile or a sentiment
-is as if it were given in upon evidence. In Shakespear the commonest
-matter-of-fact has a romantic grace about it; or seems to float with the
-breath of imagination in a freer element. No one could have more depth
-of feeling or observation than Chaucer, but he wanted resources of
-invention to lay open the stores of nature or the human heart with the
-same radiant light that Shakespear has done. However fine or profound
-the thought, we know what is coming, whereas the effect of reading
-Shakespear is ‘like the eye of vassalage at unawares encountering
-majesty.’ Chaucer’s mind was consecutive, rather than discursive. He
-arrived at truth through a certain process; Shakespear saw every thing
-by intuition. Chaucer had a great variety of power, but he could do only
-one thing at once. He set himself to work on a particular subject. His
-ideas were kept separate, labelled, ticketed and parcelled out in a set
-form, in pews and compartments by themselves. They did not play into one
-another’s hands. They did not re-act upon one another, as the blower’s
-breath moulds the yielding glass. There is something hard and dry in
-them. What is the most wonderful thing in Shakespear’s faculties is
-their excessive sociability, and how they gossiped and compared notes
-together.
-
-We must conclude this criticism; and we will do it with a quotation or
-two. One of the most beautiful passages in Chaucer’s tale is the
-description of Cresseide’s first avowal of her love.
-
- ‘And as the new abashed nightingale,
- That stinteth first when she beginneth sing,
- When that she heareth any herde’s tale,
- Or in the hedges any wight stirring,
- And, after, sicker doth her voice outring;
- Right so Cresseide, when that her dread stent,
- Opened her heart, and told him her intent.’
-
-See also the two next stanzas, and particularly that divine one
-beginning—
-
- ‘Her armes small, her back both straight and soft,’ etc.
-
-Compare this with the following speech of Troilus to Cressida in the
-play:—
-
- ‘O, that I thought it could be in a woman;
- And if it can, I will presume in you,
- To feed for aye her lamp and flame of love,
- To keep her constancy in plight and youth,
- Out-living beauties outward, with a mind
- That doth renew swifter than blood decays.
- Or, that persuasion could but thus convince me,
- That my integrity and truth to you
- Might be affronted with the match and weight
- Of such a winnow’d purity in love;
- How were I then uplifted! But alas,
- I am as true as Truth’s simplicity,
- And simpler than the infancy of Truth.’
-
-These passages may not seem very characteristic at first sight, though
-we think they are so. We will give two, that cannot be mistaken.
-Patroclus says to Achilles,
-
- ——‘Rouse yourself; and the weak wanton Cupid
- Shall from your neck unloose his amorous fold,
- And like a dew-drop from the lion’s mane,
- Be shook to air.’
-
-Troilus, addressing the God of Day on the approach of the morning that
-parts him from Cressida, says with much scorn,
-
- ‘What! proffer’st thou thy light here for to sell?
- Go sell it them that smallé selés grave.’
-
-If nobody but Shakespear could have written the former, nobody but
-Chaucer would have thought of the latter.—Chaucer was the most literal
-of poets, as Richardson was of prose-writers.
-
-
- ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA
-
-This is a very noble play. Though not in the first class of Shakespear’s
-productions, it stands next to them, and is, we think, the finest of his
-historical plays, that is, of those in which he made poetry the organ of
-history, and assumed a certain tone of character and sentiment, in
-conformity to known facts, instead of trusting to his observations of
-general nature or to the unlimited indulgence of his own fancy. What he
-has added to the actual story, is upon a par with it. His genius was, as
-it were, a match for history as well as nature, and could grapple at
-will with either. The play is full of that pervading comprehensive power
-by which the poet could always make himself master of time and
-circumstances. It presents a fine picture of Roman pride and Eastern
-magnificence: and in the struggle between the two, the empire of the
-world seems suspended, ‘like the swan’s down-feather,
-
- ‘That stands upon the swell at full of tide,
- And neither way inclines.’
-
-The characters breathe, move, and live. Shakespear does not stand
-reasoning on what his characters would do or say, but at once _becomes_
-them, and speaks and acts for them. He does not present us with groups
-of stage-puppets or poetical machines making set speeches on human life,
-and acting from a calculation of problematical motives, but he brings
-living men and women on the scene, who speak and act from real feelings,
-according to the ebbs and flows of passion, without the least tincture
-of pedantry of logic or rhetoric. Nothing is made out by inference and
-analogy, by climax and antithesis, but every thing takes place just as
-it would have done in reality, according to the occasion.—The character
-of Cleopatra is a master-piece. What an extreme contrast it affords to
-Imogen! One would think it almost impossible for the same person to have
-drawn both. She is voluptuous, ostentatious, conscious, boastful of her
-charms, haughty, tyrannical, fickle. The luxurious pomp and gorgeous
-extravagance of the Egyptian queen are displayed in all their force and
-lustre, as well as the irregular grandeur of the soul of Mark Antony.
-Take only the first four lines that they speak as an example of the
-regal style of love-making.
-
- ‘_Cleopatra._ If it be love indeed, tell me how much?
-
- _Antony._ There’s beggary in the love that can be reckon’d.
-
- _Cleopatra._ I’ll set a bourn how far to be belov’d.
-
- _Antony._ Then must thou needs find out new heav’n, new earth.’
-
-The rich and poetical description of her person beginning—
-
- ‘The barge she sat in, like a burnish’d throne,
- Burnt on the water; the poop was beaten gold,
- Purple the sails, and so perfumed, that
- The winds were love-sick’—
-
-seems to prepare the way for, and almost to justify the subsequent
-infatuation of Antony when in the sea-fight at Actium, he leaves the
-battle, and ‘like a doating mallard’ follows her flying sails.
-
-Few things in Shakespear (and we know of nothing in any other author
-like them) have more of that local truth of imagination and character
-than the passage in which Cleopatra is represented conjecturing what
-were the employments of Antony in his absence—‘He’s speaking now, or
-murmuring—_Where’s my serpent of old Nile?_’ Or again, when she says to
-Antony, after the defeat at Actium, and his summoning up resolution to
-risk another fight—‘It is my birthday; I had thought to have held it
-poor; but since my lord is Antony again, I will be Cleopatra.’ Perhaps
-the finest burst of all is Antony’s rage after his final defeat when he
-comes in, and surprises the messenger of Cæsar kissing her hand—
-
- ‘To let a fellow that will take rewards,
- And say God quit you, be familiar with,
- My play-fellow, your hand; this kingly seal,
- And plighter of high hearts.’
-
-It is no wonder that he orders him to be whipped; but his low condition
-is not the true reason: there is another feeling which lies deeper,
-though Antony’s pride would not let him shew it, except by his rage; he
-suspects the fellow to be Cæsar’s proxy.
-
-Cleopatra’s whole character is the triumph of the voluptuous, of the
-love of pleasure and the power of giving it, over every other
-consideration. Octavia is a dull foil to her, and Fulvia a shrew and
-shrill-tongued. What a picture do those lines give of her—
-
- ‘Age cannot wither her, nor custom steal
- Her infinite variety. Other women cloy
- The appetites they feed, but she makes hungry
- Where most she satisfies.’
-
-What a spirit and fire in her conversation with Antony’s messenger who
-brings her the unwelcome news of his marriage with Octavia! How all the
-pride of beauty and of high rank breaks out in her promised reward to
-him—
-
- ——‘There’s gold, and here
- My bluest veins to kiss!’—
-
-She had great and unpardonable faults, but the grandeur of her death
-almost redeems them. She learns from the depth of despair the strength
-of her affections. She keeps her queen-like state in the last disgrace,
-and her sense of the pleasurable in the last moments of her life. She
-tastes a luxury in death. After applying the asp, she says with
-fondness—
-
- ‘Dost thou not see my baby at my breast,
- That sucks the nurse asleep?
- As sweet as balm, as soft as air, as gentle.
- Oh Antony!’
-
-It is worth while to observe that Shakespear has contrasted the extreme
-magnificence of the descriptions in this play with pictures of extreme
-suffering and physical horror, not less striking—partly perhaps to place
-the effeminate character of Mark Antony in a more favourable light, and
-at the same time to preserve a certain balance of feeling in the mind.
-Cæsar says, hearing of his rival’s conduct at the court of Cleopatra,
-
- ——‘Antony,
- Leave thy lascivious wassels. When thou once
- Wert beaten from Mutina, where thou slew’st
- Hirtius and Pansa, consuls, at thy heel
- Did famine follow, whom thou fought’st against,
- Though daintily brought up, with patience more
- Than savages could suffer. Thou did’st drink
- The stale of horses, and the gilded puddle
- Which beast would cough at. Thy palate then did deign
- The roughest berry on the rudest hedge,
- Yea, like the stag, when snow the pasture sheets,
- The barks of trees thou browsed’st. On the Alps,
- It is reported, thou didst eat strange flesh,
- Which some did die to look on: and all this,
- It wounds thine honour, that I speak it now,
- Was borne so like a soldier, that thy cheek
- So much as lank’d not.’
-
-The passage after Antony’s defeat by Augustus, where he is made to say—
-
- ‘Yes, yes; he at Philippi kept
- His sword e’en like a dancer; while I struck
- The lean and wrinkled Cassius, and ’twas I
- That the mad Brutus ended’—
-
-is one of those fine retrospections which show us the winding and
-eventful march of human life. The jealous attention which has been paid
-to the unities both of time and place has taken away the principle of
-perspective in the drama, and all the interest which objects derive from
-distance, from contrast, from privation, from change of fortune, from
-long-cherished passion; and contrasts our view of life from a strange
-and romantic dream, long, obscure, and infinite, into a smartly
-contested, three hours’ inaugural disputation on its merits by the
-different candidates for theatrical applause.
-
-The latter scenes of ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA are full of the changes of
-accident and passion. Success and defeat follow one another with
-startling rapidity. Fortune sits upon her wheel more blind and giddy
-than usual. This precarious state and the approaching dissolution of his
-greatness are strikingly displayed in the dialogue of Antony with Eros.
-
- ‘_Antony._ Eros, thou yet behold’st me?
-
- _Eros._ Ay, noble lord.
-
- _Antony._ Sometime we see a cloud that’s dragonish,
- A vapour sometime, like a bear or lion,
- A towered citadel, a pendant rock,
- A forked mountain, or blue promontory
- With trees upon’t, that nod unto the world
- And mock our eyes with air. Thou hast seen these signs,
- They are black vesper’s pageants.
-
- _Eros._ Ay, my lord.
-
- _Antony._ That which is now a horse, even with a thought
- The rack dislimns, and makes it indistinct
- As water is in water.
-
- _Eros._ It does, my lord.
-
- _Antony._ My good knave, Eros, now thy captain is
- Even such a body,’ etc.
-
-This is, without doubt, one of the finest pieces of poetry in
-Shakespear. The splendour of the imagery, the semblance of reality, the
-lofty range of picturesque objects hanging over the world, their
-evanescent nature, the total uncertainty of what is left behind, are
-just like the mouldering schemes of human greatness. It is finer than
-Cleopatra’s passionate lamentation over his fallen grandeur, because it
-is more dim, unstable, unsubstantial. Antony’s headstrong presumption
-and infatuated determination to yield to Cleopatra’s wishes to fight by
-sea instead of land, meet a merited punishment; and the extravagance of
-his resolutions, increasing with the desperateness of his circumstances,
-is well commented upon by Œnobarbus.
-
- ——‘I see men’s judgments are
- A parcel of their fortunes, and things outward
- Do draw the inward quality after them
- To suffer all alike.’
-
-The repentance of Œnobarbus after his treachery to his master is the
-most affecting part of the play. He cannot recover from the blow which
-Antony’s generosity gives him, and he dies broken-hearted, ‘a
-master-leaver and a fugitive.’
-
-Shakespear’s genius has spread over the whole play a richness like the
-overflowing of the Nile.
-
-
- HAMLET
-
-This is that Hamlet the Dane, whom we read of in our youth, and whom we
-may be said almost to remember in our after-years; he who made that
-famous soliloquy on life, who gave the advice to the players, who
-thought ‘this goodly frame, the earth, a steril promontory, and this
-brave o’er-hanging firmament, the air, this majestical roof fretted with
-golden fire, a foul and pestilent congregation of vapours’; whom ‘man
-delighted not, nor woman neither’; he who talked with the grave-diggers,
-and moralised on Yorick’s skull; the school-fellow of Rosencraus and
-Guildenstern at Wittenberg; the friend of Horatio; the lover of Ophelia;
-he that was mad and sent to England; the slow avenger of his father’s
-death; who lived at the court of Horwendillus five hundred years before
-we were born, but all whose thoughts we seem to know as well as we do
-our own, because we have read them in Shakespear.
-
-Hamlet is a name; his speeches and sayings but the idle coinage of the
-poet’s brain. What then, are they not real? They are as real as our own
-thoughts. Their reality is in the reader’s mind. It is _we_ who are
-Hamlet. This play has a prophetic truth, which is above that of history.
-Whoever has become thoughtful and melancholy through his own mishaps or
-those of others; whoever has borne about with him the clouded brow of
-reflection, and thought himself ‘too much i’ th’ sun’; whoever has seen
-the golden lamp of day dimmed by envious mists rising in his own breast,
-and could find in the world before him only a dull blank with nothing
-left remarkable in it; whoever has known ‘the pangs of despised love,
-the insolence of office, or the spurns which patient merit of the
-unworthy takes’; he who has felt his mind sink within him, and sadness
-cling to his heart like a malady, who has had his hopes blighted and his
-youth staggered by the apparitions of strange things; who cannot be well
-at ease, while he sees evil hovering near him like a spectre; whose
-powers of action have been eaten up by thought, he to whom the universe
-seems infinite, and himself nothing; whose bitterness of soul makes him
-careless of consequences, and who goes to a play as his best resource to
-shove off, to a second remove, the evils of life by a mock
-representation of them—this is the true Hamlet.
-
-We have been so used to this tragedy that we hardly know how to
-criticise it any more than we should know how to describe our own faces.
-But we must make such observations as we can. It is the one of
-Shakespear’s plays that we think of the oftenest, because it abounds
-most in striking reflections on human life, and because the distresses
-of Hamlet are transferred, by the turn of his mind, to the general
-account of humanity. Whatever happens to him we apply to ourselves,
-because he applies it so himself as a means of general reasoning. He is
-a great moraliser; and what makes him worth attending to is, that he
-moralises on his own feelings and experience. He is not a common-place
-pedant. If _Lear_ is distinguished by the greatest depth of passion,
-HAMLET is the most remarkable for the ingenuity, originality, and
-unstudied developement of character. Shakespear had more magnanimity
-than any other poet, and he has shewn more of it in this play than in
-any other. There is no attempt to force an interest: every thing is left
-for time and circumstances to unfold. The attention is excited without
-effort, the incidents succeed each other as matters of course, the
-characters think and speak and act just as they might do, if left
-entirely to themselves. There is no set purpose, no straining at a
-point. The observations are suggested by the passing scene—the gusts of
-passion come and go like sounds of music borne on the wind. The whole
-play is an exact transcript of what might be supposed to have taken
-place at the court of Denmark, at the remote period of time fixed upon,
-before the modern refinements in morals and manners were heard of. It
-would have been interesting enough to have been admitted as a by-stander
-in such a scene, at such a time, to have heard and witnessed something
-of what was going on. But here we are more than spectators. We have not
-only ‘the outward pageants and the signs of grief’; but ‘we have that
-within which passes shew.’ We read the thoughts of the heart, we catch
-the passions living as they rise. Other dramatic writers give us very
-fine versions and paraphrases of nature; but Shakespear, together with
-his own comments, gives us the original text, that we may judge for
-ourselves. This is a very great advantage.
-
-The character of Hamlet stands quite by itself. It is not a character
-marked by strength of will or even of passion, but by refinement of
-thought and sentiment. Hamlet is as little of the hero as a man can well
-be: but he is a young and princely novice, full of high enthusiasm and
-quick sensibility—the sport of circumstances, questioning with fortune
-and refining on his own feelings, and forced from the natural bias of
-his disposition by the strangeness of his situation. He seems incapable
-of deliberate action, and is only hurried into extremities on the spur
-of the occasion, when he has no time to reflect, as in the scene where
-he kills Polonius, and again, where he alters the letters which
-Rosencraus and Guildenstern are taking with them to England, purporting
-his death. At other times, when he is most bound to act, he remains
-puzzled, undecided, and sceptical, dallies with his purposes, till the
-occasion is lost, and finds out some pretence to relapse into indolence
-and thoughtfulness again. For this reason he refuses to kill the King
-when he is at his prayers, and by a refinement in malice, which is in
-truth only an excuse for his own want of resolution, defers his revenge
-to a more fatal opportunity, when he shall be engaged in some act ‘that
-has no relish of salvation in it.’
-
- ‘He kneels and prays,
- And now I’ll do’t, and so he goes to heaven,
- And so am I reveng’d: _that would be scann’d_.
- He kill’d my father, and for that,
- I, his sole son, send him to heaven.
- Why this is reward, not revenge.
- Up sword and know thou a more horrid time,
- When he is drunk, asleep, or in a rage.’
-
-He is the prince of philosophical speculators; and because he cannot
-have his revenge perfect, according to the most refined idea his wish
-can form, he declines it altogether. So he scruples to trust the
-suggestions of the ghost, contrives the scene of the play to have surer
-proof of his uncle’s guilt, and then rests satisfied with this
-confirmation of his suspicions, and the success of his experiment,
-instead of acting upon it. Yet he is sensible of his own weakness, taxes
-himself with it, and tries to reason himself out of it.
-
- ‘How all occasions do inform against me,
- And spur my dull revenge! What is a man,
- If his chief good and market of his time
- Be but to sleep and feed? A beast; no more.
- Sure he that made us with such large discourse,
- Looking before and after, gave us not
- That capability and god-like reason
- To rust in us unus’d. Now whether it be
- Bestial oblivion, or some craven scruple
- Of thinking too precisely on th’ event,—
- A thought which quarter’d, hath but one part wisdom,
- And ever three parts coward;—I do not know
- Why yet I live to say, this thing’s to do;
- Sith I have cause, and will, and strength, and means
- To do it. Examples gross as earth exhort me:
- Witness this army of such mass and charge,
- Led by a delicate and tender prince,
- Whose spirit with divine ambition puff’d,
- Makes mouths at the invisible event,
- Exposing what is mortal and unsure
- To all that fortune, death, and danger dare,
- Even for an egg-shell. ’Tis not to be great
- Never to stir without great argument;
- But greatly to find quarrel in a straw,
- When honour’s at the stake. How stand I then,
- That have a father kill’d, a mother stain’d,
- Excitements of my reason and my blood,
- And let all sleep, while to my shame I see
- The imminent death of twenty thousand men,
- That for a fantasy and trick of fame,
- Go to their graves like beds, fight for a plot
- Whereon the numbers cannot try the cause,
- Which is not tomb enough and continent
- To hide the slain?—O, from this time forth,
- My thoughts be bloody or be nothing worth.’
-
-Still he does nothing; and this very speculation on his own infirmity
-only affords him another occasion for indulging it. It is not from any
-want of attachment to his father or of abhorrence of his murder that
-Hamlet is thus dilatory, but it is more to his taste to indulge his
-imagination in reflecting upon the enormity of the crime and refining on
-his schemes of vengeance, than to put them into immediate practice. His
-ruling passion is to think, not to act: and any vague pretext that
-flatters this propensity instantly diverts him from his previous
-purposes.
-
-The moral perfection of this character has been called in question, we
-think, by those who did not understand it. It is more interesting than
-according to rules; amiable, though not faultless. The ethical
-delineations of ‘that noble and liberal casuist’ (as Shakespear has been
-well called) do not exhibit the drab-coloured Quakerism of morality. His
-plays are not copied either from The Whole Duty of Man, or from The
-Academy of Compliments! We confess we are a little shocked at the want
-of refinement in those who are shocked at the want of refinement in
-Hamlet. The neglect of punctilious exactness in his behaviour either
-partakes of the ‘licence of the time,’ or else belongs to the very
-excess of intellectual refinement in the character, which makes the
-common rules of life, as well as his own purposes, sit loose upon him.
-He may be said to be amenable only to the tribunal of his own thoughts,
-and is too much taken up with the airy world of contemplation to lay as
-much stress as he ought on the practical consequences of things. His
-habitual principles of action are unhinged and out of joint with the
-time. His conduct to Ophelia is quite natural in his circumstances. It
-is that of assumed severity only. It is the effect of disappointed hope,
-of bitter regrets, of affection suspended, not obliterated, by the
-distractions of the scene around him! Amidst the natural and
-preternatural horrors of his situation, he might be excused in delicacy
-from carrying on a regular courtship. When ‘his father’s spirit was in
-arms,’ it was not a time for the son to make love in. He could neither
-marry Ophelia, nor wound her mind by explaining the cause of his
-alienation, which he durst hardly trust himself to think of. It would
-have taken him years to have come to a direct explanation on the point.
-In the harassed state of his mind, he could not have done much otherwise
-than he did. His conduct does not contradict what he says when he sees
-her funeral,
-
- ‘I loved Ophelia: forty thousand brothers
- Could not with all their quantity of love
- Make up my sum.’
-
-Nothing can be more affecting or beautiful than the Queen’s apostrophe
-to Ophelia on throwing the flowers into the grave.
-
- ——‘Sweets to the sweet, farewell.
- I hop’d thou should’st have been my Hamlet’s wife:
- I thought thy bride-bed to have deck’d, sweet maid,
- And not have strew’d thy grave.’
-
-Shakespear was thoroughly a master of the mixed motives of human
-character, and he here shews us the Queen, who was so criminal in some
-respects, not without sensibility and affection in other relations of
-life.—Ophelia is a character almost too exquisitely touching to be dwelt
-upon. Oh rose of May, oh flower too soon faded! Her love, her madness,
-her death, are described with the truest touches of tenderness and
-pathos. It is a character which nobody but Shakespear could have drawn
-in the way that he has done, and to the conception of which there is not
-even the smallest approach, except in some of the old romantic
-ballads.[67] Her brother, Laertes, is a character we do not like so
-well: he is too hot and choleric, and somewhat rhodomontade. Polonius is
-a perfect character in its kind; nor is there any foundation for the
-objections which have been made to the consistency of this part. It is
-said that he acts very foolishly and talks very sensibly. There is no
-inconsistency in that. Again, that he talks wisely at one time and
-foolishly at another; that his advice to Laertes is very excellent, and
-his advice to the King and Queen on the subject of Hamlet’s madness very
-ridiculous. But he gives the one as a father, and is sincere in it; he
-gives the other as a mere courtier, a busy-body, and is accordingly
-officious, garrulous, and impertinent. In short, Shakespear has been
-accused of inconsistency in this and other characters, only because he
-has kept up the distinction which there is in nature, between the
-understandings and the moral habits of men, between the absurdity of
-their ideas and the absurdity of their motives. Polonius is not a fool,
-but he makes himself so. His folly, whether in his actions or speeches,
-comes under the head of impropriety of intention.
-
-We do not like to see our author’s plays acted, and least of all,
-HAMLET. There is no play that suffers so much in being transferred to
-the stage. Hamlet himself seems hardly capable of being acted. Mr.
-Kemble unavoidably fails in this character from a want of ease and
-variety. The character of Hamlet is made up of undulating lines; it has
-the yielding flexibility of ‘a wave o’ th’ sea.’ Mr. Kemble plays it
-like a man in armour, with a determined inveteracy of purpose, in one
-undeviating straight line, which is as remote from the natural grace and
-refined susceptibility of the character, as the sharp angles and abrupt
-starts which Mr. Kean introduces into the part. Mr. Kean’s Hamlet is as
-much too splenetic and rash as Mr. Kemble’s is too deliberate and
-formal. His manner is too strong and pointed. He throws a severity,
-approaching to virulence, into the common observations and answers.
-There is nothing of this in Hamlet. He is, as it were, wrapped up in his
-reflections, and only _thinks aloud_. There should therefore be no
-attempt to impress what he says upon others by a studied exaggeration of
-emphasis or manner; no _talking at_ his hearers. There should be as much
-of the gentleman and scholar as possible infused into the part, and as
-little of the actor. A pensive air of sadness should sit reluctantly
-upon his brow, but no appearance of fixed and sullen gloom. He is full
-of weakness and melancholy, but there is no harshness in his nature. He
-is the most amiable of misanthropes.
-
-
- THE TEMPEST
-
-There can be little doubt that Shakespear was the most universal genius
-that ever lived. ‘Either for tragedy, comedy, history, pastoral,
-pastoral-comical, historical-pastoral, scene individable or poem
-unlimited, he is the only man. Seneca cannot be too heavy, nor Plautus
-too light for him.’ He has not only the same absolute command over our
-laughter and our tears, all the resources of passion, of wit, of
-thought, of observation, but he has the most unbounded range of fanciful
-invention, whether terrible or playful, the same insight into the world
-of imagination that he has into the world of reality; and over all there
-presides the same truth of character and nature, and the same spirit of
-humanity. His ideal beings are as true and natural as his real
-characters; that is, as consistent with themselves, or if we suppose
-such beings to exist at all, they could not act, speak, or feel
-otherwise than as he makes them. He has invented for them a language,
-manners, and sentiments of their own, from the tremendous imprecations
-of the Witches in _Macbeth_, when they do ‘a deed without a name,’ to
-the sylph-like expressions of Ariel, who ‘does his spiriting gently’;
-the mischievous tricks and gossipping of Robin Goodfellow, or the
-uncouth gabbling and emphatic gesticulations of Caliban in this play.
-
-The TEMPEST is one of the most original and perfect of Shakespear’s
-productions, and he has shewn in it all the variety of his powers. It is
-full of grace and grandeur. The human and imaginary characters, the
-dramatic and the grotesque, are blended together with the greatest art,
-and without any appearance of it. Though he has here given ‘to airy
-nothing a local habitation and a name,’ yet that part which is only the
-fantastic creation of his mind, has the same palpable texture, and
-coheres ‘semblably’ with the rest. As the preternatural part has the air
-of reality, and almost haunts the imagination with a sense of truth, the
-real characters and events partake of the wildness of a dream. The
-stately magician, Prospero, driven from his dukedom, but around whom (so
-potent is his art) airy spirits throng numberless to do his bidding; his
-daughter Miranda (‘worthy of that name’) to whom all the power of his
-art points, and who seems the goddess of the isle; the princely
-Ferdinand, cast by fate upon the haven of his happiness in this idol of
-his love; the delicate Ariel; the savage Caliban, half brute, half
-demon; the drunken ship’s crew—are all connected parts of the story, and
-can hardly be spared from the place they fill. Even the local scenery is
-of a piece and character with the subject. Prospero’s enchanted island
-seems to have risen up out of the sea; the airy music, the tempest-tost
-vessel, the turbulent waves, all have the effect of the landscape
-background of some fine picture. Shakespear’s pencil is (to use an
-allusion of his own) ‘like the dyer’s hand, subdued to what it works
-in.’ Every thing in him, though it partakes of ‘the liberty of wit,’ is
-also subjected to ‘the law’ of the understanding. For instance, even the
-drunken sailors, who are made reeling-ripe, share, in the disorder of
-their minds and bodies, in the tumult of the elements, and seem on shore
-to be as much at the mercy of chance as they were before at the mercy of
-the winds and waves. These fellows with their sea-wit are the least to
-our taste of any part of the play: but they are as like drunken sailors
-as they can be, and are an indirect foil to Caliban, whose figure
-acquires a classical dignity in the comparison.
-
-The character of Caliban is generally thought (and justly so) to be one
-of the author’s master-pieces. It is not indeed pleasant to see this
-character on the stage any more than it is to see the god Pan personated
-there. But in itself it is one of the wildest and most abstracted of all
-Shakespear’s characters, whose deformity whether of body or mind is
-redeemed by the power and truth of the imagination displayed in it. It
-is the essence of grossness, but there is not a particle of vulgarity in
-it. Shakespear has described the brutal mind of Caliban in contact with
-the pure and original forms of nature; the character grows out of the
-soil where it is rooted, uncontrouled, uncouth and wild, uncramped by
-any of the meannesses of custom. It is ‘of the earth, earthy.’ It seems
-almost to have been dug out of the ground, with a soul instinctively
-superadded to it answering to its wants and origin. Vulgarity is not
-natural coarseness, but conventional coarseness, learnt from others,
-contrary to, or without an entire conformity of natural power and
-disposition; as fashion is the common-place affectation of what is
-elegant and refined without any feeling of the essence of it. Schlegel,
-the admirable German critic on Shakespear, observes that Caliban is a
-poetical character, and ‘always speaks in blank verse.’ He first comes
-in thus:
-
- ‘_Caliban._ As wicked dew as e’er my mother brush’d
- With raven’s feather from unwholesome fen,
- Drop on you both: a south-west blow on ye,
- And blister you all o’er!
-
- _Prospero._ For this, be sure, to-night thou shalt have cramps,
- Side-stitches that shall pen thy breath up; urchins
- Shall for that vast of night that they may work,
- All exercise on thee: thou shalt be pinched
- As thick as honey-combs, each pinch more stinging
- Than bees that made them.
-
- _Caliban._ I must eat my dinner.
- This island’s mine by Sycorax my mother,
- Which thou tak’st from me. When thou camest first,
- Thou stroak’dst me, and mad’st much of me; would’st give me
- Water with berries in ‘t; and teach me how
- To name the bigger light and how the less
- That burn by day and night; and then I lov’d thee,
- And shew’d thee all the qualities o’ th’ isle,
- The fresh springs, brine-pits, barren place and fertile:
- Curs’d be I that I did so! All the charms
- Of Sycorax, toads, beetles, bats, light on you!
- For I am all the subjects that you have,
- Who first was mine own king; and here you sty me
- In this hard rock, whiles you do keep from me
- The rest o’ th’ island.’
-
-And again, he promises Trinculo his services thus, if he will free him
-from his drudgery.
-
- ‘I’ll shew thee the best springs; I’ll pluck thee berries,
- I’ll fish for thee, and get thee wood enough.
- I pr’ythee let me bring thee where crabs grow,
- And I with my long nails will dig thee pig-nuts:
- Shew thee a jay’s nest, and instruct thee how
- To snare the nimble marmozet: I’ll bring thee
- To clust’ring filberds; and sometimes I’ll get thee
- Young scamels from the rock.’
-
-In conducting Stephano and Trinculo to Prospero’s cell, Caliban shews
-the superiority of natural capacity over greater knowledge and greater
-folly; and in a former scene, when Ariel frightens them with his music,
-Caliban to encourage them accounts for it in the eloquent poetry of the
-senses.
-
- —‘Be not afraid, the isle is full of noises,
- Sounds, and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
- Sometimes a thousand twanging instruments
- Will hum about mine ears, and sometimes voices,
- That if I then had waked after long sleep,
- Would make me sleep again; and then in dreaming,
- The clouds methought would open, and shew riches
- Ready to drop upon me; when I wak’d,
- I cried to dream again.’
-
-This is not more beautiful than it is true. The poet here shews us the
-savage with the simplicity of a child, and makes the strange monster
-amiable. Shakespear had to paint the human animal rude and without
-choice in its pleasures, but not without the sense of pleasure or some
-germ of the affections. Master Barnardine in _Measure for Measure_, the
-savage of civilized life, is an admirable philosophical counterpart to
-Caliban.
-
-Shakespear has, as it were by design, drawn off from Caliban the
-elements of whatever is ethereal and refined, to compound them in the
-unearthly mould of Ariel. Nothing was ever more finely conceived than
-this contrast between the material and the spiritual, the gross and
-delicate. Ariel is imaginary power, the swiftness of thought
-personified. When told to make good speed by Prospero, he says, ‘I drink
-the air before me.’ This is something like Puck’s boast on a similar
-occasion, ‘I’ll put a girdle round about the earth in forty minutes.’
-But Ariel differs from Puck in having a fellow feeling in the interests
-of those he is employed about. How exquisite is the following dialogue
-between him and Prospero!
-
- ‘_Ariel._ Your charm so strongly works ‘em,
- That if you now beheld them, your affections
- Would become tender.
-
- _Prospero._ Dost thou think so, spirit?
-
- _Ariel._ Mine would, sir, were I human.
-
- _Prospero._ And mine shall.
- Hast thou, which art but air, a touch, a feeling
- Of their afflictions, and shall not myself,
- One of their kind, that relish all as sharply,
- Passion’d as they, be kindlier moved than thou art?’
-
-It has been observed that there is a peculiar charm in the songs
-introduced in Shakespear, which, without conveying any distinct images,
-seem to recall all the feelings connected with them, like snatches of
-half-forgotten music heard indistinctly and at intervals. There is this
-effect produced by Ariel’s songs, which (as we are told) seem to sound
-in the air, and as if the person playing them were invisible. We shall
-give one instance out of many of this general power.
-
- ‘_Enter_ FERDINAND; _and_ ARIEL _invisible, playing and singing_.
-
- ARIEL’S SONG.
-
- Come unto these yellow sands,
- And then take hands;
- Curt’sied when you have, and kiss’d,
- (The wild waves whist;)
- Foot it featly here and there;
- And sweet sprites the burden bear.
- [_Burden dispersedly._
- Hark, hark! bowgh-wowgh: the watch-dogs bark,
- Bowgh-wowgh.
-
- _Ariel._ Hark, hark! I hear
- The strain of strutting chanticleer
- Cry cock-a-doodle-doo.
-
- _Ferdinand._ Where should this music be? i’ the air or the earth?
- It sounds no more: and sure it waits upon
- Some god o’ th’ island. Sitting on a bank
- Weeping against the king my father’s wreck,
- This music crept by me upon the waters,
- Allaying both their fury and my passion
- With its sweet air; thence I have follow’d it,
- Or it hath drawn me rather:—but ’tis gone.—
- No, it begins again.
-
- ARIEL’S SONG.
-
- Full fathom five thy father lies,
- Of his bones are coral made:
- Those are pearls that were his eyes,
- Nothing of him that doth fade,
- But doth suffer a sea change,
- Into something rich and strange.
- Sea-nymphs hourly ring his knell—
- Hark! now I hear them, ding-dong bell.
- [_Burden ding-dong._
-
- _Ferdinand._ The ditty does remember my drown’d father.
- This is no mortal business, nor no sound
- That the earth owes: I hear it now above me.’—
-
-The courtship between Ferdinand and Miranda is one of the chief beauties
-of this play. It is the very purity of love. The pretended interference
-of Prospero with it heightens its interest, and is in character with the
-magician, whose sense of preternatural power makes him arbitrary,
-tetchy, and impatient of opposition.
-
-The TEMPEST is a finer play than the _Midsummer Night’s Dream_, which
-has sometimes been compared with it; but it is not so fine a poem. There
-are a greater number of beautiful passages in the latter. Two of the
-most striking in the TEMPEST are spoken by Prospero. The one is that
-admirable one when the vision which he has conjured up disappears,
-beginning ‘The cloud-capp’d towers, the gorgeous palaces,’ etc., which
-has been so often quoted, that every school-boy knows it by heart; the
-other is that which Prospero makes in abjuring his art.
-
- ‘Ye elves of hills, brooks, standing lakes, and groves,
- And ye that on the sands with printless foot
- Do chase the ebbing Neptune, and do fly him
- When he comes back; you demi-puppets, that
- By moon-shine do the green sour ringlets make,
- Whereof the ewe not bites; and you whose pastime
- Is to make midnight mushrooms, that rejoice
- To hear the solemn curfew, by whose aid
- (Weak masters tho’ ye be) I have be-dimm’d
- The noon-tide sun, call’d forth the mutinous winds,
- And ‘twixt the green sea and the azur’d vault
- Set roaring war; to the dread rattling thunder
- Have I giv’n fire, and rifted Jove’s stout oak
- With his own bolt; the strong-bas’d promontory
- Have I made shake, and by the spurs pluck’d up
- The pine and cedar: graves at my command
- Have wak’d their sleepers; oped, and let ‘em forth
- By my so potent art. But this rough magic
- I here abjure; and when I have requir’d
- Some heavenly music, which even now I do,
- (To work mine end upon their senses that
- This airy charm is for) I’ll break my staff,
- Bury it certain fadoms in the earth,
- And deeper than did ever plummet sound,
- I’ll drown my book.’—
-
-We must not forget to mention among other things in this play, that
-Shakespear has anticipated nearly all the arguments on the Utopian
-schemes of modern philosophy.
-
- ‘_Gonzalo._ Had I the plantation of this isle, my lord—
-
- _Antonio._ He’d sow it with nettle-seed.
-
- _Sebastian._ Or docks or mallows.
-
- _Gonzalo._ And were the king on’t, what would I do?
-
- _Sebastian._ ‘Scape being drunk, for want of wine.
-
- _Gonzalo._ I’ the commonwealth I would by contraries
- Execute all things: for no kind of traffic
- Would I admit; no name of magistrate;
- Letters should not be known; wealth, poverty,
- And use of service, none; contract, succession,
- Bourn, bound of land, tilth, vineyard, none;
- No use of metal, corn, or wine, or oil;
- No occupation, all men idle, all,
- And women too; but innocent and pure:
- No sovereignty.
-
- _Sebastian._ And yet he would be king on ‘t.
-
- _Antonio._ The latter end of his commonwealth forgets the
- beginning.
-
- _Gonzalo._ All things in common nature should produce
- Without sweat or endeavour. Treason, felony,
- Sword, pike, knife, gun, or need of any engine
- Would I not have; but nature should bring forth,
- Of its own kind, all foizon, all abundance
- To feed my innocent people!
-
- _Sebastian._ No marrying ‘mong his subjects?
-
- _Antonio._ None, man; all idle; whores and knaves.
-
- _Gonzalo._ I would with such perfection govern, sir,
- To excel the golden age.
-
- _Sebastian._ Save his majesty!’
-
-
- THE MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM
-
-Bottom the Weaver is a character that has not had justice done him. He
-is the most romantic of mechanics. And what a list of companions he
-has—Quince the Carpenter, Snug the Joiner, Flute the Bellows-mender,
-Snout the Tinker, Starveling the Tailor; and then again, what a group of
-fairy attendants, Puck, Peaseblossom, Cobweb, Moth, and Mustard-seed! It
-has been observed that Shakespear’s characters are constructed upon deep
-physiological principles; and there is something in this play which
-looks very like it. Bottom the Weaver, who takes the lead of
-
- ‘This crew of patches, rude mechanicals,
- That work for bread upon Athenian stalls,’
-
-follows a sedentary trade, and he is accordingly represented as
-conceited, serious, and fantastical. He is ready to undertake any thing
-and every thing, as if it was as much a matter of course as the motion
-of his loom and shuttle. He is for playing the tyrant, the lover, the
-lady, the lion. ‘He will roar that it shall do any man’s heart good to
-hear him’; and this being objected to as improper, he still has a
-resource in his good opinion of himself, and ‘will roar you an ‘twere
-any nightingale.’ Snug the Joiner is the moral man of the piece, who
-proceeds by measurement and discretion in all things. You see him with
-his rule and compasses in his hand. ‘Have you the lion’s part written?
-Pray you, if it be, give it me, for I am slow of study.’ ‘You may do it
-extempore,’ says Quince, ‘for it is nothing but roaring.’ Starveling the
-Tailor keeps the peace, and objects to the lion and the drawn sword. ‘I
-believe we must leave the killing out when all’s done.’ Starveling,
-however, does not start the objections himself, but seconds them when
-made by others, as if he had not spirit to express his fears without
-encouragement. It is too much to suppose all this intentional: but it
-very luckily falls out so. Nature includes all that is implied in the
-most subtle analytical distinctions; and the same distinctions will be
-found in Shakespear. Bottom, who is not only chief actor, but
-stage-manager for the occasion, has a device to obviate the danger of
-frightening the ladies: ‘Write me a prologue, and let the prologue seem
-to say, we will do no harm with our swords, and that Pyramus is not
-killed indeed; and for better assurance, tell them that I, Pyramus, am
-not Pyramus, but Bottom the Weaver: this will put them out of fear.’
-Bottom seems to have understood the subject of dramatic illusion at
-least as well as any modern essayist. If our holiday mechanic rules the
-roast among his fellows, he is no less at home in his new character of
-an ass, ‘with amiable cheeks, and fair large ears.’ He instinctively
-acquires a most learned taste, and grows fastidious in the choice of
-dried peas and bottled hay. He is quite familiar with his new
-attendants, and assigns them their parts with all due gravity. ‘Monsieur
-Cobweb, good Monsieur, get your weapon in your hand, and kill me a
-red-hipt humble bee on the top of a thistle, and, good Monsieur, bring
-me the honey-bag.’ What an exact knowledge is here shewn of natural
-history!
-
-Puck, or Robin Goodfellow, is the leader of the fairy band. He is the
-Ariel of the MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM; and yet as unlike as can be to the
-Ariel in _The Tempest_. No other poet could have made two such different
-characters out of the same fanciful materials and situations. Ariel is a
-minister of retribution, who is touched with the sense of pity at the
-woes he inflicts. Puck is a mad-cap sprite, full of wantonness and
-mischief, who laughs at those whom he misleads—‘Lord, what fools these
-mortals be!’ Ariel cleaves the air, and executes his mission with the
-zeal of a winged messenger; Puck is borne along on his fairy errand like
-the light and glittering gossamer before the breeze. He is, indeed, a
-most Epicurean little gentleman, dealing in quaint devices, and faring
-in dainty delights. Prospero and his world of spirits are a set of
-moralists: but with Oberon and his fairies we are launched at once into
-the empire of the butterflies. How beautifully is this race of beings
-contrasted with the men and women actors in the scene, by a single
-epithet which Titania gives to the latter, ‘the human mortals!’ It is
-astonishing that Shakespear should be considered, not only by
-foreigners, but by many of our own critics, as a gloomy and heavy
-writer, who painted nothing but ‘gorgons and hydras, and chimeras dire.’
-His subtlety exceeds that of all other dramatic writers, insomuch that a
-celebrated person of the present day said that he regarded him rather as
-a metaphysician than a poet. His delicacy and sportive gaiety are
-infinite. In the MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM alone, we should imagine, there
-is more sweetness and beauty of description than in the whole range of
-French poetry put together. What we mean is this, that we will produce
-out of that single play ten passages, to which we do not think any ten
-passages in the works of the French poets can be opposed, displaying
-equal fancy and imagery. Shall we mention the remonstrance of Helena to
-Hermia, or Titania’s description of her fairy train, or her disputes
-with Oberon about the Indian boy, or Puck’s account of himself and his
-employments, or the Fairy Queen’s exhortation to the elves to pay due
-attendance upon her favourite, Bottom; or Hippolita’s description of a
-chace, or Theseus’s answer? The two last are as heroical and spirited as
-the others are full of luscious tenderness. The reading of this play is
-like wandering in a grove by moonlight: the descriptions breathe a
-sweetness like odours thrown from beds of flowers.
-
-Titania’s exhortation to the fairies to wait upon Bottom, which is
-remarkable for a certain cloying sweetness in the repetition of the
-rhymes, is as follows:—
-
- ‘Be kind and courteous to this gentleman.
- Hop in his walks, and gambol in his eyes,
- Feed him with apricocks and dewberries,
- With purple grapes, green figs and mulberries;
- The honey-bags steal from the humble bees,
- And for night tapers crop their waxen thighs,
- And light them at the fiery glow-worm’s eyes,
- To have my love to bed, and to arise:
- And pluck the wings from painted butterflies,
- To fan the moon-beams from his sleeping eyes;
- Nod to him, elves, and do him courtesies.’
-
-The sounds of the lute and of the trumpet are not more distinct than the
-poetry of the foregoing passage, and of the conversation between Theseus
-and Hippolita.
-
- ‘_Theseus._ Go, one of you, find out the forester,
- For now our observation is perform’d;
- And since we have the vaward of the day,
- My love shall hear the music of my hounds.
- Uncouple in the western valley, go,
- Dispatch, I say, and find the forester.
- We will, fair Queen, up to the mountain’s top,
- And mark the musical confusion
- Of hounds and echo in conjunction.
-
- _Hippolita._ I was with Hercules and Cadmus once,
- When in a wood of Crete they bay’d the bear
- With hounds of Sparta; never did I hear
- Such gallant chiding. For besides the groves,
- The skies, the fountains, every region near
- Seem’d all one mutual cry. I never heard
- So musical a discord, such sweet thunder.
-
- _Theseus._ My hounds are bred out of the Spartan kind,
- So flew’d, so sanded, and their heads are hung
- With ears that sweep away the morning dew;
- Crook-knee’d and dew-lap’d, like Thessalian bulls.
- Slow in pursuit, but matched in mouth like bells,
- Each under each. A cry more tuneable
- Was never halloo’d to, nor cheer’d with horn,
- In Crete, in Sparta, nor in Thessaly:
- Judge when you hear.’—
-
-Even Titian never made a hunting-piece of a _gusto_ so fresh and lusty,
-and so near the first ages of the world as this.—
-
-It had been suggested to us, that the MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM would do
-admirably to get up as a Christmas after-piece; and our prompter
-proposed that Mr. Kean should play the part of Bottom, as worthy of his
-great talents. He might, in the discharge of his duty, offer to play the
-lady like any of our actresses that he pleased, the lover or the tyrant
-like any of our actors that he pleased, and the lion like ‘the most
-fearful wild-fowl living.’ The carpenter, the tailor, and joiner, it was
-thought, would hit the galleries. The young ladies in love would
-interest the side-boxes; and Robin Goodfellow and his companions excite
-a lively fellow-feeling in the children from school. There would be two
-courts, an empire within an empire, the Athenian and the Fairy King and
-Queen, with their attendants, and with all their finery. What an
-opportunity for processions, for the sound of trumpets and glittering of
-spears! What a fluttering of urchins’ painted wings; what a delightful
-profusion of gauze clouds and airy spirits floating on them!
-
-Alas the experiment has been tried, and has failed; not through the
-fault of Mr. Kean, who did not play the part of Bottom, nor of Mr.
-Liston, who did, and who played it well, but from the nature of things.
-The MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM, when acted, is converted from a delightful
-fiction into a dull pantomime. All that is finest in the play is lost in
-the representation. The spectacle was grand: but the spirit was
-evaporated, the genius was fled.—Poetry and the stage do not agree well
-together. The attempt to reconcile them in this instance fails not only
-of effect, but of decorum. The _ideal_ can have no place upon the stage,
-which is a picture without perspective; everything there is in the
-foreground. That which was merely an airy shape, a dream, a passing
-thought, immediately becomes an unmanageable reality. Where all is left
-to the imagination (as is the case in reading) every circumstance, near
-or remote, has an equal chance of being kept in mind, and tells
-according to the mixed impression of all that has been suggested. But
-the imagination cannot sufficiently qualify the actual impressions of
-the senses. Any offence given to the eye is not to be got rid of by
-explanation. Thus Bottom’s head in the play is a fantastic illusion,
-produced by magic spells: on the stage it is an ass’s head, and nothing
-more; certainly a very strange costume for a gentleman to appear in.
-Fancy cannot be embodied any more than a simile can be painted; and it
-is as idle to attempt it as to personate _Wall_ or _Moonshine_. Fairies
-are not incredible, but fairies six feet high are so. Monsters are not
-shocking, if they are seen at a proper distance. When ghosts appear at
-mid-day, when apparitions stalk along Cheapside, then may the MIDSUMMER
-NIGHT’S DREAM be represented without injury at Covent Garden or at Drury
-Lane. The boards of a theatre and the regions of fancy are not the same
-thing.
-
-
- ROMEO AND JULIET
-
-ROMEO AND JULIET is the only tragedy which Shakespear has written
-entirely on a love-story. It is supposed to have been his first play,
-and it deserves to stand in that proud rank. There is the buoyant spirit
-of youth in every line, in the rapturous intoxication of hope, and in
-the bitterness of despair. It has been said of ROMEO AND JULIET by a
-great critic, that ‘whatever is most intoxicating in the odour of a
-southern spring, languishing in the song of the nightingale, or
-voluptuous in the first opening of the rose, is to be found in this
-poem.’ The description is true; and yet it does not answer to our idea
-of the play. For if it has the sweetness of the rose, it has its
-freshness too; if it has the languor of the nightingale’s song, it has
-also its giddy transport; if it has the softness of a southern spring,
-it is as glowing and as bright. There is nothing of a sickly and
-sentimental cast. Romeo and Juliet are in love, but they are not
-love-sick. Every thing speaks the very soul of pleasure, the high and
-healthy pulse of the passions: the heart beats, the blood circulates and
-mantles throughout. Their courtship is not an insipid interchange of
-sentiments lip-deep, learnt at second-hand from poems and plays,—made up
-of beauties of the most shadowy kind, of ‘fancies wan that hang the
-pensive head,’ of evanescent smiles, and sighs that breathe not, of
-delicacy that shrinks from the touch, and feebleness that scarce
-supports itself, an elaborate vacuity of thought, and an artificial
-dearth of sense, spirit, truth, and nature! It is the reverse of all
-this. It is Shakespear all over, and Shakespear when he was young.
-
-We have heard it objected to ROMEO AND JULIET, that it is founded on an
-idle passion between a boy and a girl, who have scarcely seen and can
-have but little sympathy or rational esteem for one another, who have
-had no experience of the good or ills of life, and whose raptures or
-despair must be therefore equally groundless and fantastical. Whoever
-objects to the youth of the parties in this play as ‘too unripe and
-crude’ to pluck the sweets of love, and wishes to see a first-love
-carried on into a good old age, and the passions taken at the rebound,
-when their force is spent, may find all this done in the _Stranger_ and
-in other German plays, where they do things by contraries, and transpose
-nature to inspire sentiment and create philosophy. Shakespear proceeded
-in a more strait-forward, and, we think, effectual way. He did not
-endeavour to extract beauty from wrinkles, or the wild throb of passion
-from the last expiring sigh of indifference. He did not ‘gather grapes
-of thorns nor figs of thistles.’ It was not his way. But he has given a
-picture of human life, such as it is in the order of nature. He has
-founded the passion of the two lovers not on the pleasures they had
-experienced, but on all the pleasures they had _not_ experienced. All
-that was to come of life was theirs. At that untried source of promised
-happiness they slaked their thirst, and the first eager draught made
-them drunk with love and joy. They were in full possession of their
-senses and their affections. Their hopes were of air, their desires of
-fire. Youth is the season of love, because the heart is then first
-melted in tenderness from the touch of novelty, and kindled to rapture,
-for it knows no end of its enjoyments or its wishes. Desire has no limit
-but itself. Passion, the love and expectation of pleasure, is infinite,
-extravagant, inexhaustible, till experience comes to check and kill it.
-Juliet exclaims on her first interview with Romeo—
-
- ‘My bounty is as boundless as the sea,
- My love as deep.’
-
-And why should it not? What was to hinder the thrilling tide of
-pleasure, which had just gushed from her heart, from flowing on without
-stint or measure, but experience which she was yet without? What was to
-abate the transport of the first sweet sense of pleasure, which her
-heart and her senses had just tasted, but indifference which she was yet
-a stranger to? What was there to check the ardour of hope, of faith, of
-constancy, just rising in her breast, but disappointment which she had
-not yet felt! As are the desires and the hopes of youthful passion, such
-is the keenness of its disappointments, and their baleful effect. Such
-is the transition in this play from the highest bliss to the lowest
-despair, from the nuptial couch to an untimely grave. The only evil that
-even in apprehension befalls the two lovers is the loss of the greatest
-possible felicity; yet this loss is fatal to both, for they had rather
-part with life than bear the thought of surviving all that had made life
-dear to them. In all this, Shakespear has but followed nature, which
-existed in his time, as well as now. The modern philosophy, which
-reduces the whole theory of the mind to habitual impressions, and leaves
-the natural impulses of passion and imagination out of the account, had
-not then been discovered; or if it had, would have been little
-calculated for the uses of poetry.
-
-It is the inadequacy of the same false system of philosophy to account
-for the strength of our earliest attachments, which has led Mr.
-Wordsworth to indulge in the mystical visions of Platonism in his Ode on
-the Progress of Life. He has very admirably described the vividness of
-our impressions in youth and childhood, and how ‘they fade by degrees
-into the light of common day,’ and he ascribes the change to the
-supposition of a pre-existent state, as if our early thoughts were
-nearer heaven, reflections of former trails of glory, shadows of our
-past being. This is idle. It is not from the knowledge of the past that
-the first impressions of things derive their gloss and splendour, but
-from our ignorance of the future, which fills the void to come with the
-warmth of our desires, with our gayest hopes, and brightest fancies. It
-is the obscurity spread before it that colours the prospect of life with
-hope, as it is the cloud which reflects the rainbow. There is no
-occasion to resort to any mystical union and transmission of feeling
-through different states of being to account for the romantic enthusiasm
-of youth; nor to plant the root of hope in the grave, nor to derive it
-from the skies. Its root is in the heart of man: it lifts its head above
-the stars. Desire and imagination are inmates of the human breast. The
-heaven ‘that lies about us in our infancy’ is only a new world, of which
-we know nothing but what we wish it to be, and believe all that we wish.
-In youth and boyhood, the world we live in is the world of desire, and
-of fancy: it is experience that brings us down to the world of reality.
-What is it that in youth sheds a dewy light round the evening star? That
-makes the daisy look so bright? That perfumes the hyacinth? That embalms
-the first kiss of love? It is the delight of novelty, and the seeing no
-end to the pleasure that we fondly believe is still in store for us. The
-heart revels in the luxury of its own thoughts, and is unable to sustain
-the weight of hope and love that presses upon it.—The effects of the
-passion of love alone might have dissipated Mr. Wordsworth’s theory, if
-he means any thing more by it than an ingenious and poetical allegory.
-_That_ at least is not a link in the chain let down from other worlds;
-‘the purple light of love’ is not a dim reflection of the smiles of
-celestial bliss. It does not appear till the middle of life, and then
-seems like ‘another morn risen on mid-day.’ In this respect the soul
-comes into the world ‘in utter nakedness.’ Love waits for the ripening
-of the youthful blood. The sense of pleasure precedes the love of
-pleasure, but with the sense of pleasure, as soon as it is felt, come
-thronging infinite desires and hopes of pleasure, and love is mature as
-soon as born. It withers and it dies almost as soon!
-
-This play presents a beautiful _coup-d’œil_ of the progress of human
-life. In thought it occupies years, and embraces the circle of the
-affections from childhood to old age. Juliet has become a great girl, a
-young woman since we first remember her a little thing in the idle
-prattle of the nurse. Lady Capulet was about her age when she became a
-mother, and old Capulet somewhat impatiently tells his younger visitors,
-
- ——‘I’ve seen the day,
- That I have worn a visor, and could tell
- A whispering tale in a fair lady’s ear,
- Such as would please: ’tis gone, ’tis gone, ’tis gone.’
-
-Thus one period of life makes way for the following, and one generation
-pushes another off the stage. One of the most striking passages to show
-the intense feeling of youth in this play is Capulet’s invitation to
-Paris to visit his entertainment.
-
- ‘At my poor house, look to behold this night
- Earth-treading stars that make dark heav’n light;
- Such comfort as do lusty young men feel
- When well-apparel’d April on the heel
- Of limping winter treads, even such delight
- Among fresh female-buds shall you this night
- Inherit at my house.’
-
-The feelings of youth and of the spring are here blended together like
-the breath of opening flowers. Images of vernal beauty appear to have
-floated before the author’s mind, in writing this poem, in profusion.
-Here is another of exquisite beauty, brought in more by accident than by
-necessity. Montague declares of his son smit with a hopeless passion,
-which he will not reveal—
-
- ‘But he, his own affection’s counsellor,
- Is to himself so secret and so close,
- So far from sounding and discovery,
- As is the bud bit with an envious worm,
- Ere he can spread his sweet leaves to the air,
- Or dedicate his beauty to the sun.’
-
-This casual description is as full of passionate beauty as when Romeo
-dwells in frantic fondness on ‘the white wonder of his Juliet’s hand.’
-The reader may, if he pleases, contrast the exquisite pastoral
-simplicity of the above lines with the gorgeous description of Juliet
-when Romeo first sees her at her father’s house, surrounded by company
-and artificial splendour.
-
- ‘What lady’s that which doth enrich the hand
- Of yonder knight?
- O she doth teach the torches to burn bright;
- Her beauty hangs upon the cheek of night,
- Like a rich jewel in an Æthiop’s ear.’
-
-It would be hard to say which of the two garden scenes is the finest,
-that where he first converses with his love, or takes leave of her the
-morning after their marriage. Both are like a heaven upon earth; the
-blissful bowers of Paradise let down upon this lower world. We will give
-only one passage of these well known scenes to shew the perfect
-refinement and delicacy of Shakespear’s conception of the female
-character. It is wonderful how Collins, who was a critic and a poet of
-great sensibility, should have encouraged the common error on this
-subject by saying—‘But stronger Shakespear felt for man alone.’
-
-The passage we mean is Juliet’s apology for her maiden boldness.
-
- ‘Thou know’st the mask of night is on my face;
- Else would a maiden blush bepaint my cheek
- For that which thou hast heard me speak to-night.
- Fain would I dwell on form, fain, fain deny
- What I have spoke—but farewel compliment:
- Dost thou love me? I know thou wilt say, ay,
- And I will take thee at thy word—Yet if thou swear’st,
- Thou may’st prove false; at lovers’ perjuries
- They say Jove laughs. Oh gentle Romeo,
- If thou dost love, pronounce it faithfully;
- Or if thou think I am too quickly won,
- I’ll frown and be perverse, and say thee nay,
- So thou wilt woo: but else not for the world.
- In truth, fair Montague, I am too fond;
- And therefore thou may’st think my ‘haviour light;
- But trust me, gentleman, I’ll prove more true
- Than those that have more cunning to be strange.
- I should have been more strange, I must confess
- But that thou over-heard’st, ere I was ware,
- My true love’s passion; therefore pardon me,
- And not impute this yielding to light love,
- Which the dark night hath so discovered.’
-
-In this and all the rest, her heart, fluttering between pleasure, hope,
-and fear, seems to have dictated to her tongue, and ‘calls true love
-spoken simple modesty.’ Of the same sort, but bolder in virgin
-innocence, is her soliloquy after her marriage with Romeo.
-
- ‘Gallop apace, you fiery-footed steeds,
- Towards Phœbus’ mansion; such a waggoner
- As Phaëton would whip you to the west,
- And bring in cloudy night immediately.
- Spread thy close curtain, love-performing night;
- That run-aways’ eyes may wink; and Romeo
- Leap to these arms, untalked of, and unseen!——
- Lovers can see to do their amorous rites
- By their own beauties: or if love be blind,
- It best agrees with night.—Come, civil night,
- Thou sober-suited matron, all in black,
- And learn me how to lose a winning match,
- Play’d for a pair of stainless maidenhoods:
- Hold my unmann’d blood bating in my cheeks,
- With thy black mantle; till strange love, grown bold,
- Thinks true love acted, simple modesty.
- Come night!—Come, Romeo! come, thou day in night;
- For thou wilt lie upon the wings of night
- Whiter than new snow on a raven’s back.——
- Come, gentle night; come, loving, black-brow’d night,
- Give me my Romeo: and when he shall die,
- Take him and cut him out in little stars,
- And he will make the face of heaven so fine,
- That all the world shall be in love with night,
- And pay no worship to the garish sun.——
- O, I have bought the mansion of a love,
- But not possess’d it; and though I am sold,
- Not yet enjoy’d: so tedious is this day,
- As is the night before some festival
- To an impatient child, that hath new robes,
- And may not wear them.’
-
-We the rather insert this passage here, inasmuch as we have no doubt it
-has been expunged from the Family Shakespear. Such critics do not
-perceive that the feelings of the heart sanctify, without disguising,
-the impulses of nature. Without refinement themselves, they confound
-modesty with hypocrisy. Not so the German critic, Schlegel. Speaking of
-ROMEO AND JULIET, he says, ‘It was reserved for Shakespear to unite
-purity of heart and the glow of imagination, sweetness and dignity of
-manners and passionate violence, in one ideal picture.’ The character is
-indeed one of perfect truth and sweetness. It has nothing forward,
-nothing coy, nothing affected or coquettish about it;—it is a pure
-effusion of nature. It is as frank as it is modest, for it has no
-thought that it wishes to conceal. It reposes in conscious innocence on
-the strength of its affections. Its delicacy does not consist in
-coldness and reserve, but in combining warmth of imagination and
-tenderness of heart with the most voluptuous sensibility. Love is a
-gentle flame that rarifies and expands her whole being. What an idea of
-trembling haste and airy grace, borne upon the thoughts of love, does
-the Friar’s exclamation give of her, as she approaches his cell to be
-married—
-
- ‘Here comes the lady. Oh, so light of foot
- Will ne’er wear out the everlasting flint:
- A lover may bestride the gossamer,
- That idles in the wanton summer air,
- And yet not fall, so light is vanity.’
-
-The tragic part of this character is of a piece with the rest. It is the
-heroic founded on tenderness and delicacy. Of this kind are her
-resolution to follow the Friar’s advice, and the conflict in her bosom
-between apprehension and love when she comes to take the sleeping
-poison. Shakespear is blamed for the mixture of low characters. If this
-is a deformity, it is the source of a thousand beauties. One instance is
-the contrast between the guileless simplicity of Juliet’s attachment to
-her first love, and the convenient policy of the nurse in advising her
-to marry Paris, which excites such indignation in her mistress. ‘Ancient
-damnation! oh most wicked fiend,’ etc.
-
-Romeo is Hamlet in love. There is the same rich exuberance of passion
-and sentiment in the one, that there is of thought and sentiment in the
-other. Both are absent and self-involved, both live out of themselves in
-a world of imagination. Hamlet is abstracted from every thing; Romeo is
-abstracted from every thing but his love, and lost in it. His ‘frail
-thoughts dally with faint surmise,’ and are fashioned out of the
-suggestions of hope, ‘the flatteries of sleep.’ He is himself only in
-his Juliet; she is his only reality, his heart’s true home and idol. The
-rest of the world is to him a passing dream. How finely is this
-character pourtrayed where he recollects himself on seeing Paris slain
-at the tomb of Juliet!—
-
- ‘What said my man, when my betossed soul
- Did not attend him as we rode? I think
- He told me Paris should have married Juliet.’
-
-And again, just before he hears the sudden tidings of her death—
-
- ‘If I may trust the flattery of sleep,
- My dreams presage some joyful news at hand;
- My bosom’s lord sits lightly on his throne,
- And all this day an unaccustom’d spirit
- Lifts me above the ground with cheerful thoughts.
- I dreamt my lady came and found me dead,
- (Strange dream! that gives a dead man leave to think)
- And breath’d such life with kisses on my lips,
- That I reviv’d and was an emperour.
- Ah me! how sweet is love itself possess’d,
- When but love’s shadows are so rich in joy!’
-
-Romeo’s passion for Juliet is not a first love: it succeeds and drives
-out his passion for another mistress, Rosaline, as the sun hides the
-stars. This is perhaps an artifice (not absolutely necessary) to give us
-a higher opinion of the lady, while the first absolute surrender of her
-heart to him enhances the richness of the prize. The commencement,
-progress, and ending of his second passion are however complete in
-themselves, not injured if they are not bettered by the first. The
-outline of the play is taken from an Italian novel; but the dramatic
-arrangement of the different scenes between the lovers, the more than
-dramatic interest in the progress of the story, the developement of the
-characters with time and circumstances, just according to the degree and
-kind of interest excited, are not inferior to the expression of passion
-and nature. It has been ingeniously remarked among other proofs of skill
-in the contrivance of the fable, that the improbability of the main
-incident in the piece, the administering of the sleeping-potion, is
-softened and obviated from the beginning by the introduction of the
-Friar on his first appearance culling simples and descanting on their
-virtues. Of the passionate scenes in this tragedy, that between the
-Friar and Romeo when he is told of his sentence of banishment, that
-between Juliet and the Nurse when she hears of it, and of the death of
-her cousin Tybalt (which bear no proportion in her mind, when passion
-after the first shock of surprise throws its weight into the scale of
-her affections) and the last scene at the tomb, are among the most
-natural and overpowering. In all of these it is not merely the force of
-any one passion that is given, but the slightest and most unlooked-for
-transitions from one to another, the mingling currents of every
-different feeling rising up and prevailing in turn, swayed by the
-master-mind of the poet, as the waves undulate beneath the gliding
-storm. Thus when Juliet has by her complaints encouraged the Nurse to
-say, ‘Shame come to Romeo,’ she instantly repels the wish, which she had
-herself occasioned, by answering—
-
- ‘Blister’d be thy tongue
- For such a wish! He was not born to shame.
- Upon his brow shame is ashamed to sit,
- For ’tis a throne where honour may be crown’d
- Sole monarch of the universal earth!
- O, what a beast was I to chide him so?
-
- _Nurse._ Will you speak well of him that kill’d your cousin?
-
- _Juliet._ Shall I speak ill of him that is my husband?
- Ah my poor lord, what tongue shall smooth thy name,
- When I, thy three-hours’ wife, have mangled it?’
-
-And then follows on the neck of her remorse and returning fondness, that
-wish treading almost on the brink of impiety, but still held back by the
-strength of her devotion to her lord, that ‘father, mother, nay, or both
-were dead,’ rather than Romeo banished. If she requires any other
-excuse, it is in the manner in which Romeo echoes her frantic grief and
-disappointment in the next scene at being banished from her.—Perhaps one
-of the finest pieces of acting that ever was witnessed on the stage, is
-Mr. Kean’s manner of doing this scene and his repetition of the word,
-_Banished_. He treads close indeed upon the genius of his author.
-
-A passage which this celebrated actor and able commentator on Shakespear
-(actors are the best commentators on the poets) did not give with equal
-truth or force of feeling was the one which Romeo makes at the tomb of
-Juliet, before he drinks the poison.
-
- ——‘Let me peruse this face—
- Mercutio’s kinsman! noble county Paris!
- What said my man, when my betossed soul
- Did not attend him as we rode? I think,
- He told me Paris should have married Juliet:
- Said he not so? or did I dream it so?
- Or am I mad, hearing him talk of Juliet,
- To think it was so?——O, give me thy hand,
- One writ with me in sour misfortune’s book!
- I’ll bury thee in a triumphant grave——
- For here lies Juliet.
-
- . . . . .
-
- ——O, my love! my wife!
- Death that hath suck’d the honey of thy breath,
- Hath had no power yet upon thy beauty:
- Thou art not conquer’d; beauty’s ensign yet
- Is crimson in thy lips, and in thy cheeks,
- And Death’s pale flag is not advanced there.——
- Tybalt, ly’st thou there in thy bloody sheet?
- O, what more favour can I do to thee,
- Than with that hand that cut thy youth in twain,
- To sunder his that was thine enemy?
- Forgive me, cousin! Ah, dear Juliet,
- Why art thou yet so fair! Shall I believe
- That unsubstantial death is amorous;
- And that the lean abhorred monster keeps
- Thee here in dark to be his paramour!
- For fear of that, I will stay still with thee;
- And never from this palace of dim night
- Depart again: here, here will I remain
- With worms that are thy chamber-maids; O, here
- Will I set up my everlasting rest;
- And shake the yoke of inauspicious stars
- From this world-wearied flesh.—Eyes, look your last!
- Arms, take your last embrace! and lips, O you,
- The doors of breath, seal with a righteous kiss
- A dateless bargain to engrossing death!—
- Come, bitter conduct, come unsavoury guide!
- Thou desperate pilot, now at once run on
- The dashing rocks my sea-sick weary bark!
- Here’s to my love!—[_Drinks._] O, true apothecary!
- Thy drugs are quick.—Thus with a kiss I die.’
-
-The lines in this speech, describing the loveliness of Juliet, who is
-supposed to be dead, have been compared to those in which it is said of
-Cleopatra after her death, that she looked ‘as she would take another
-Antony in her strong toil of grace’; and a question has been started
-which is the finest, that we do not pretend to decide. We can more
-easily decide between Shakespear and any other author, than between him
-and himself.—Shall we quote any more passages to shew his genius or the
-beauty of ROMEO AND JULIET? At that rate, we might quote the whole. The
-late Mr. Sheridan, on being shewn a volume of the Beauties of
-Shakespear, very properly asked—‘But where are the other eleven?’ The
-character of Mercutio in this play is one of the most mercurial and
-spirited of the productions of Shakespear’s comic muse.
-
-
- LEAR
-
-We wish that we could pass this play over, and say nothing about it. All
-that we can say must fall far short of the subject; or even of what we
-ourselves conceive of it. To attempt to give a description of the play
-itself or of its effect upon the mind, is mere impertinence; yet we must
-say something.—It is then the best of all Shakespear’s plays, for it is
-the one in which he was the most in earnest. He was here fairly caught
-in the web of his own imagination. The passion which he has taken as his
-subject is that which strikes its root deepest into the human heart; of
-which the bond is the hardest to be unloosed; and the cancelling and
-tearing to pieces of which gives the greatest revulsion to the frame.
-This depth of nature, this force of passion, this tug and war of the
-elements of our being, this firm faith in filial piety, and the giddy
-anarchy and whirling tumult of the thoughts at finding this prop failing
-it, the contrast between the fixed, immoveable basis of natural
-affection, and the rapid, irregular starts of imagination, suddenly
-wrenched from all its accustomed holds and resting-places in the soul,
-this is what Shakespear has given, and what nobody else but he could
-give. So we believe.—The mind of Lear, staggering between the weight of
-attachment and the hurried movements of passion, is like a tall ship
-driven about by the winds, buffetted by the furious waves, but that
-still rides above the storm, having its anchor fixed in the bottom of
-the sea; or it is like the sharp rock circled by the eddying whirlpool
-that foams and beats against it, or like the solid promontory pushed
-from its basis by the force of an earthquake.
-
-The character of Lear itself is very finely conceived for the purpose.
-It is the only ground on which such a story could be built with the
-greatest truth and effect. It is his rash haste, his violent
-impetuosity, his blindness to every thing but the dictates of his
-passions or affections, that produces all his misfortunes, that
-aggravates his impatience of them, that enforces our pity for him. The
-part which Cordelia bears in the scene is extremely beautiful: the story
-is almost told in the first words she utters. We see at once the
-precipice on which the poor old king stands from his own extravagant and
-credulous importunity, the indiscreet simplicity of her love (which, to
-be sure, has a little of her father’s obstinacy in it) and the
-hollowness of her sisters’ pretensions. Almost the first burst of that
-noble tide of passion, which runs through the play, is in the
-remonstrance of Kent to his royal master on the injustice of his
-sentence against his youngest daughter—‘Be Kent unmannerly, when Lear is
-mad!’ This manly plainness, which draws down on him the displeasure of
-the unadvised king, is worthy of the fidelity with which he adheres to
-his fallen fortunes. The true character of the two eldest daughters,
-Regan and Gonerill (they are so thoroughly hateful that we do not even
-like to repeat their names) breaks out in their answer to Cordelia who
-desires them to treat their father well—‘Prescribe not us our
-duties’—their hatred of advice being in proportion to their
-determination to do wrong, and to their hypocritical pretensions to do
-right. Their deliberate hypocrisy adds the last finishing to the
-odiousness of their characters. It is the absence of this detestable
-quality that is the only relief in the character of Edmund the Bastard,
-and that at times reconciles us to him. We are not tempted to exaggerate
-the guilt of his conduct, when he himself gives it up as a bad business,
-and writes himself down ‘plain villain.’ Nothing more can be said about
-it. His religious honesty in this respect is admirable. One speech of
-his is worth a million. His father, Gloster, whom he has just deluded
-with a forged story of his brother Edgar’s designs against his life,
-accounts for his unnatural behaviour and the strange depravity of the
-times from the late eclipses in the sun and moon. Edmund, who is in the
-secret, says when he is gone—‘This is the excellent foppery of the
-world, that when we are sick in fortune (often the surfeits of our own
-behaviour) we make guilty of our disasters the sun, the moon, and stars:
-as if we were villains on necessity; fools by heavenly compulsion;
-knaves, thieves, and treacherous by spherical predominance; drunkards,
-liars, and adulterers by an enforced obedience of planetary influence;
-and all that we are evil in, by a divine thrusting on. An admirable
-evasion of whore-master man, to lay his goatish disposition on the
-charge of a star! My father compounded with my mother under the Dragon’s
-tail, and my nativity was under Ursa Major: so that it follows, I am
-rough and lecherous. Tut! I should have been what I am, had the
-maidenliness star in the firmament twinkled on my bastardising.’—The
-whole character, its careless, light-hearted villainy, contrasted with
-the sullen, rancorous malignity of Regan and Gonerill, its connection
-with the conduct of the under-plot, in which Gloster’s persecution of
-one of his sons and the ingratitude of another, form a counterpart to
-the mistakes and misfortunes of Lear,—his double amour with the two
-sisters, and the share which he has in bringing about the fatal
-catastrophe, are all managed with an uncommon degree of skill and power.
-
-It has been said, and we think justly, that the third act of _Othello_
-and the three first acts of LEAR, are Shakespear’s great master-pieces
-in the logic of passion: that they contain the highest examples not only
-of the force of individual passion, but of its dramatic vicissitudes and
-striking effects arising from the different circumstances and characters
-of the persons speaking. We see the ebb and flow of the feeling, its
-pauses and feverish starts, its impatience of opposition, its
-accumulating force when it has time to recollect itself, the manner in
-which it avails itself of every passing word or gesture, its haste to
-repel insinuation, the alternate contraction and dilatation of the soul,
-and all ‘the dazzling fence of controversy’ in this mortal combat with
-poisoned weapons, aimed at the heart, where each wound is fatal. We have
-seen in _Othello_, how the unsuspecting frankness and impetuous passions
-of the Moor are played upon and exasperated by the artful dexterity of
-Iago. In the present play, that which aggravates the sense of sympathy
-in the reader, and of uncontroulable anguish in the swoln heart of Lear,
-is the petrifying indifference, the cold, calculating, obdurate
-selfishness of his daughters. His keen passions seem whetted on their
-stony hearts. The contrast would be too painful, the shock too great,
-but for the intervention of the Fool, whose well-timed levity comes in
-to break the continuity of feeling when it can no longer be borne, and
-to bring into play again the fibres of the heart just as they are
-growing rigid from overstrained excitement. The imagination is glad to
-take refuge in the half-comic, half-serious comments of the Fool, just
-as the mind under the extreme anguish of a surgical operation vents
-itself in sallies of wit. The character was also a grotesque ornament of
-the barbarous times, in which alone the tragic ground-work of the story
-could be laid. In another point of view it is indispensable, inasmuch as
-while it is a diversion to the too great intensity of our disgust, it
-carries the pathos to the highest pitch of which it is capable, by
-shewing the pitiable weakness of the old king’s conduct and its
-irretrievable consequences in the most familiar point of view. Lear may
-well ‘beat at the gate which let his folly in,’ after, as the Fool says,
-‘he has made his daughters his mothers.’ The character is dropped in the
-third act to make room for the entrance of Edgar as Mad Tom, which well
-accords with the increasing bustle and wildness of the incidents; and
-nothing can be more complete than the distinction between Lear’s real
-and Edgar’s assumed madness, while the resemblance in the cause of their
-distresses, from the severing of the nearest ties of natural affection,
-keeps up a unity of interest. Shakespear’s mastery over his subject, if
-it was not art, was owing to a knowledge of the connecting links of the
-passions, and their effect upon the mind, still more wonderful than any
-systematic adherence to rules, and that anticipated and outdid all the
-efforts of the most refined art, not inspired and rendered instinctive
-by genius.
-
-One of the most perfect displays of dramatic power is the first
-interview between Lear and his daughter, after the designed affronts
-upon him, which till one of his knights reminds him of them, his
-sanguine temperament had led him to overlook. He returns with his train
-from hunting, and his usual impatience breaks out in his first words,
-‘Let me not stay a jot for dinner; go, get it ready.’ He then encounters
-the faithful Kent in disguise, and retains him in his service; and the
-first trial of his honest duty is to trip up the heels of the officious
-Steward who makes so prominent and despicable a figure through the
-piece. On the entrance of Gonerill the following dialogue takes place:—
-
- ‘_Lear._ How now, daughter? what makes that frontlet on?
- Methinks, you are too much of late i’ the frown.
-
- _Fool._ Thou wast a pretty fellow, when thou had’st no need to care
- for her frowning; now thou art an O without a figure: I am better
- than thou art now; I am a fool, thou art nothing.——Yes, forsooth, I
- will hold my tongue; [_To Gonerill_], so your face bids me, though
- you say nothing. Mum, mum.
-
- He that keeps nor crust nor crum,
- Weary of all, shall want some.——
-
- That’s a sheal’d peascod! [_Pointing to Lear._
-
- _Gonerill._ Not only, sir, this your all-licens’d fool,
- But other of your insolent retinue
- Do hourly carp and quarrel; breaking forth
- In rank and not-to-be-endured riots.
- I had thought, by making this well known unto you,
- To have found a safe redress; but now grow fearful,
- By what yourself too late have spoke and done,
- That you protect this course, and put it on
- By your allowance; which if you should, the fault
- Would not ‘scape censure, nor the redresses sleep,
- Which in the tender of a wholesome weal,
- Might in their working do you that offence,
- (Which else were shame) that then necessity
- Would call discreet proceeding.
-
- _Fool._ For you trow, nuncle,
-
- The hedge sparrow fed the cuckoo so long,
- That it had its head bit off by its young.
-
- So out went the candle, and we were left darkling.
-
- _Lear._ Are you our daughter?
-
- _Gonerill._ Come, sir,
- I would, you would make use of that good wisdom
- Whereof I know you are fraught; and put away
- These dispositions, which of late transform you
- From what you rightly are.
-
- _Fool._ May not an ass know when the cart draws the horse?
- ——Whoop, Jug, I love thee.
-
- _Lear._ Does any here know me?—Why, this is not Lear:
- Does Lear walk thus? speak thus?—Where are his eyes?
- Either his notion weakens, or his discernings
- Are lethargy’d——Ha! waking?—’Tis not so.——
- Who is it that can tell me who I am?—Lear’s shadow?
- I would learn that: for by the marks
- Of sov’reignty, of knowledge, and of reason,
- I should be false persuaded I had daughters.——
- Your name, fair gentlewoman?
-
- _Gonerill._ Come, sir:
- This admiration is much o’ the favour
- Of other your new pranks. I do beseech you
- To understand my purposes aright:
- As you are old and reverend, you should be wise:
- Here do you keep a hundred knights and squires;
- Men so disorder’d, so debauch’d, and bold,
- That this our court, infected with their manners,
- Shews like a riotous inn: epicurism and lust
- Make it more like a tavern, or a brothel,
- Than a grac’d palace. The shame itself doth speak
- For instant remedy: be then desir’d
- By her, that else will take the thing she begs,
- A little to disquantity your train;
- And the remainder, that shall still depend,
- To be such men as may besort your age,
- And know themselves and you.
-
- _Lear._ Darkness and devils!——
- Saddle my horses; call my train together.——
- Degenerate bastard! I’ll not trouble thee;
- Yet have I left a daughter.
-
- _Gonerill._ You strike my people; and your disorder’d rabble
- Make servants of their betters.
-
- _Enter_ ALBANY.
-
- _Lear._ Woe, that too late repents—O, sir, are you come?
- Is it your will? speak, sir.—Prepare my horses.—— [_To Albany._
- Ingratitude! thou marble-hearted fiend,
- More hideous, when thou shew’st thee in a child,
- Than the sea-monster!
-
- _Albany._ Pray, sir, be patient.
-
- _Lear._ Detested kite! thou liest. [_To Gonerill._
- My train are men of choice and rarest parts,
- That all particulars of duty know;
- And in the most exact regard support
- The worships of their name.——O most small fault,
- How ugly didst thou in Cordelia shew!
- Which, like an engine, wrench’d my frame of nature
- From the fixt place; drew from my heart all love,
- And added to the gall. O Lear, Lear, Lear!
- Beat at the gate, that let thy folly in, [_Striking his head._
- And thy dear judgment out!——Go, go, my people!
-
- _Albany._ My lord, I am guiltless, as I am ignorant
- Of what hath mov’d you.
-
- _Lear._ It may be so, my lord——
- Hear, nature, hear! dear goddess, hear!
- Suspend thy purpose, if thou didst intend
- To make this creature fruitful!
- Into her womb convey sterility;
- Dry up in her the organs of increase;
- And from her derogate body never spring
- A babe to honour her! If she must teem,
- Create her child of spleen: that it may live,
- To be a thwart disnatur’d torment to her!
- Let it stamp wrinkles in her brow of youth;
- With cadent tears fret channels in her cheeks;
- Turn all her mother’s pains, and benefits,
- To laughter and contempt; that she may feel
- How sharper than a serpent’s tooth it is
- To have a thankless child!——Away, away! [_Exit._
-
- _Albany._ Now, gods, that we adore, whereof comes this?
-
- _Gonerill._ Never afflict yourself to know the cause;
- But let his disposition have that scope
- That dotage gives it.
-
- _Re-enter_ LEAR.
-
- _Lear._ What, fifty of my followers at a clap!
- Within a fortnight!
-
- _Albany._ What’s the matter, sir?
-
- _Lear._ I’ll tell thee; life and death! I am asham’d
- That thou hast power to shake my manhood thus: [_To Gonerill._
- That these hot tears, which break from me perforce,
- Should make thee worth them.——Blasts and fogs upon thee!
- The untented woundings of a father’s curse
- Pierce every sense about thee!——Old fond eyes
- Beweep this cause again, I’ll pluck you out;
- And cast you, with the waters that you lose,
- To temper clay.——Ha! is it come to this?
- Let it be so:——Yet have I left a daughter,
- Who, I am sure, is kind and comfortable;
- When she shall hear this of thee, with her nails
- She’ll flea thy wolfish visage. Thou shalt find,
- That I’ll resume the shape, which thou dost think
- I have cast off for ever. [_Exeunt Lear, Kent, and Attendants._’
-
-This is certainly fine: no wonder that Lear says after it, ‘O let me not
-be mad, not mad, sweet heavens,’ feeling its effects by anticipation;
-but fine as is this burst of rage and indignation at the first blow
-aimed at his hopes and expectations, it is nothing near so fine as what
-follows from his double disappointment, and his lingering efforts to see
-which of them he shall lean upon for support and find comfort in, when
-both his daughters turn against his age and weakness. It is with some
-difficulty that Lear gets to speak with his daughter Regan, and her
-husband, at Gloster’s castle. In concert with Gonerill they have left
-their own home on purpose to avoid him. His apprehensions are first
-alarmed by this circumstance, and when Gloster, whose guests they are,
-urges the fiery temper of the Duke of Cornwall as an excuse for not
-importuning him a second time, Lear breaks out—
-
- ‘Vengeance! Plague! Death! Confusion!——
- Fiery? What quality? Why, Gloster, Gloster,
- I’d speak with the Duke of Cornwall, and his wife.’
-
-Afterwards, feeling perhaps not well himself, he is inclined to admit
-their excuse from illness, but then recollecting that they have set his
-messenger (Kent) in the stocks, all his suspicions are roused again, and
-he insists on seeing them.
-
- ‘_Enter_ CORNWALL, REGAN, GLOSTER, _and Servants_.
-
- _Lear._ Good-morrow to you both.
-
- _Cornwall._ Hail to your grace! [_Kent is set at liberty._
-
- _Regan._ I am glad to see your highness.
-
- _Lear._ Regan, I think you are; I know what reason
- I have to think so: if thou should’st not be glad,
- I would divorce me from thy mother’s tomb,
- Sepulch’ring an adultress.——O, are you free? [_To Kent._
- Some other time for that.——Beloved Regan,
- Thy sister’s naught: O Regan, she hath tied
- Sharp-tooth’d unkindness, like a vulture, here——
- [_Points to his heart._
- I can scarce speak to thee; thou’lt not believe,
- Of how deprav’d a quality——O Regan!
-
- _Regan._ I pray you, sir, take patience; I have hope
- You less know how to value her desert,
- Than she to scant her duty.
-
- _Lear._ Say, how is that?
-
- _Regan._ I cannot think my sister in the least
- Would fail her obligation; if, sir, perchance,
- She have restrain’d the riots of your followers,
- ’Tis on such ground, and to such wholesome end,
- As clears her from all blame.
-
- _Lear._ My curses on her!
-
- _Regan._ O, sir, you are old;
- Nature in you stands on the very verge
- Of her confine: you should be rul’d, and led
- By some discretion, that discerns your state
- Better than you yourself: therefore, I pray you,
- That to our sister you do make return;
- Say, you have wrong’d her, sir.
-
- _Lear._ Ask her forgiveness?
- Do you but mark how this becomes the use?
- _Dear daughter, I confess that I am old_;
- _Age is unnecessary; on my knees I beg,
- That you’ll vouchsafe me raiment, bed, and food._
-
- _Regan._ Good sir, no more; these are unsightly tricks:
- Return you to my sister.
-
- _Lear._ Never, Regan:
- She hath abated me of half my train;
- Look’d blank upon me; struck me with her tongue,
- Most serpent-like, upon the very heart:——
- All the stor’d vengeances of heaven fall
- On her ungrateful top! Strike her young bones,
- You taking airs, with lameness!
-
- _Cornwall._ Fie, sir, fie!
-
- _Lear._ You nimble lightnings, dart your blinding flames
- Into her scornful eyes! Infect her beauty,
- You fen-suck’d fogs, drawn by the powerful sun,
- To fall, and blast her pride!
-
- _Regan._ O the blest gods!
- So will you wish on me, when the rash mood is on.
-
- _Lear._ No, Regan, thou shalt never have my curse;
- Thy tender-hefted nature shall not give
- Thee o’er to harshness; her eyes are fierce, but thine
- Do comfort, and not burn: ’Tis not in thee
- To grudge my pleasures, to cut off my train,
- To bandy hasty words, to scant my sizes,
- And, in conclusion, to oppose the bolt
- Against my coming in: thou better know’st
- The offices of nature, bond of childhood,
- Effects of courtesy, dues of gratitude;
- Thy half o’ the kingdom thou hast not forgot,
- Wherein I thee endow’d.
-
- _Regan._ Good sir, to the purpose. [_Trumpets within._
-
- _Lear._ Who put my man i’ the stocks?
-
- _Cornwall._ What trumpet’s that?
-
- _Enter Steward._
-
- _Regan._ I know’t, my sister’s: this approves her letter,
- That she would soon be here.—Is your lady come?
-
- _Lear._ This is a slave, whose easy-borrow’d pride
- Dwells in the fickle grace of her he follows:——
- Out, Varlet, from my sight!
-
- _Cornwall._ What means your grace?
-
- _Lear._ Who stock’d my servant? Regan, I have good hope
- Thou did’st not know on’t.——Who comes here? O heavens,
-
- _Enter_ GONERILL.
-
- If you do love old men, if your sweet sway
- Allow obedience, if yourselves are old,
- Make it your cause; send down, and take my part!—
- Art not asham’d to look upon this beard?— [_To Gonerill._
- O, Regan, wilt thou take her by the hand?
-
- _Gonerill._ Why not by the hand, sir? How have I offended?
- All’s not offence, that indiscretion finds,
- And dotage terms so.
-
- _Lear._ O, sides, you are too tough!
- Will you yet hold?—How came my man i’ the stocks?
-
- _Cornwall._ I set him there, sir: but his own disorders
- Deserv’d much less advancement.
-
- _Lear._ You! did you?
-
- _Regan._ I pray you, father, being weak, seem so.
- If, till the expiration of your month,
- You will return and sojourn with my sister,
- Dismissing half your train, come then to me;
- I am now from home, and out of that provision
- Which shall be needful for your entertainment.
-
- _Lear._ Return to her, and fifty men dismiss’d?
- No, rather I abjure all roofs, and choose
- To be a comrade with the wolf and owl——
- To wage against the enmity o’ the air,
- Necessity’s sharp pinch!——Return with her!
- Why, the hot-blooded France, that dowerless took
- Our youngest born, I could as well be brought
- To knee his throne, and squire-like pension beg
- To keep base life afoot.——Return with her!
- Persuade me rather to be slave and sumpter
- To this detested groom. [_Looking on the Steward._
-
- _Gonerill._ At your choice, sir.
-
- _Lear._ Now, I pr’ythee, daughter, do not make me mad;
- I will not trouble thee, my child; farewell:
- We’ll no more meet, no more see one another:——
- But yet thou art my flesh, my blood, my daughter;
- Or, rather, a disease that’s in my flesh,
- Which I must needs call mine: thou art a bile,
- A plague-sore, an embossed carbuncle,
- In my corrupted blood. But I’ll not chide thee;
- Let shame come when it will, I do not call it:
- I did not bid the thunder-bearer shoot,
- Nor tell tales of thee to high-judging Jove:
- Mend when thou canst; be better, at thy leisure:
- I can be patient; I can stay with Regan,
- I, and my hundred knights.
-
- _Regan._ Not altogether so, sir;
- I look’d not for you yet, nor am provided
- For your fit welcome: Give ear, sir, to my sister;
- For those that mingle reason with your passion
- Must be content to think you old, and so——
- But she knows what she does.
-
- _Lear._ Is this well spoken now?
-
- _Regan._ I dare avouch it, sir: What, fifty followers?
- Is it not well? What should you need of more?
- Yea, or so many? Sith that both charge and danger
- Speak ‘gainst so great a number? How, in one house,
- Should many people, under two commands,
- Hold amity? ’Tis hard; almost impossible.
-
- _Gonerill._ Why might not you, my lord, receive attendance
- From those that she calls servants, or from mine?
-
- _Regan._ Why not, my lord? If then they chanc’d to slack you,
- We would controul them: if you will come to me
- (For now I spy a danger) I entreat you
- To bring but five-and-twenty; to no more
- Will I give place, or notice.
-
- _Lear._ I gave you all——
-
- _Regan._ And in good time you gave it.
-
- _Lear._ Made you my guardians, my depositaries;
- But kept a reservation to be follow’d
- With such a number: what, must I come to you
- With five-and-twenty, Regan! said you so?
-
- _Regan._ And speak it again, my lord: no more with me.
-
- _Lear._ Those wicked creatures yet do look well-favour’d,
- When others are more wicked; not being the worst,
- Stands in some rank of praise:——I’ll go with thee; [_To Gonerill._
- Thy fifty yet doth double five-and-twenty,
- And thou art twice her love.
-
- _Gonerill._ Hear me, my lord;
- What need you five-and-twenty, ten, or five,
- To follow in a house, where twice so many
- Have a command to tend you?
-
- _Regan._ What need one?
-
- _Lear._ O, reason not the need: our basest beggars
- Are in the poorest thing superfluous:
- Allow not nature more than nature needs,
- Man’s life is cheap as beast’s: thou art a lady;
- If only to go warm were gorgeous,
- Why, nature needs not what thou gorgeous wear’st;
- Which scarcely keeps thee warm.——But, for true need——
- You heavens, give me that patience which I need!
- You see me here, you gods; a poor old man,
- As full of grief as age; wretched in both!
- If it be you that stir these daughters’ hearts
- Against their father, fool me not so much
- To bear it tamely; touch me with noble anger!
- O, let no woman’s weapons, water-drops,
- Stain my man’s cheeks!——No, you unnatural hags,
- I will have such revenges on you both,
- That all the world shall——I will do such things——
- What they are, yet I know not; but they shall be
- The terrors of the earth. You think, I’ll weep:
- No, I’ll not weep:——
- I have full cause of weeping; but this heart
- Shall break into a hundred thousand flaws,
- Or e’er I’ll weep:——O, fool, I shall go mad!——
- [_Exeunt Lear, Gloster, Kent, and Fool._’
-
-If there is any thing in any author like this yearning of the heart,
-these throes of tenderness, this profound expression of all that can be
-thought and felt in the most heart-rending situations, we are glad of
-it; but it is in some author that we have not read.
-
-The scene in the storm, where he is exposed to all the fury of the
-elements, though grand and terrible, is not so fine, but the moralising
-scenes with Mad Tom, Kent, and Gloster, are upon a par with the former.
-His exclamation in the supposed trial-scene of his daughters, ‘See the
-little dogs and all, Tray, Blanch, and Sweetheart, see they bark at me,’
-his issuing his orders, ‘Let them anatomize Regan, see what breeds about
-her heart,’ and his reflection when he sees the misery of Edgar,
-‘Nothing but his unkind daughters could have brought him to this,’ are
-in a style of pathos, where the extremest resources of the imagination
-are called in to lay open the deepest movements of the heart, which was
-peculiar to Shakespear. In the same style and spirit is his interrupting
-the Fool who asks ‘whether a madman be a gentleman or a yeoman,’ by
-answering ‘A king, a king.—
-
-The indirect part that Gloster takes in these scenes where his
-generosity leads him to relieve Lear and resent the cruelty of his
-daughters, at the very time that he is himself instigated to seek the
-life of his son, and suffering under the sting of his supposed
-ingratitude, is a striking accompaniment to the situation of Lear.
-Indeed, the manner in which the threads of the story are woven together
-is almost as wonderful in the way of art as the carrying on the tide of
-passion, still varying and unimpaired, is on the score of nature. Among
-the remarkable instances of this kind are Edgar’s meeting with his old
-blind father; the deception he practises upon him when he pretends to
-lead him to the top of Dover-cliff—‘Come on, sir, here’s the place,’ to
-prevent his ending his life and miseries together; his encounter with
-the perfidious Steward whom he kills, and his finding the letter from
-Gonerill to his brother upon him which leads to the final catastrophe,
-and brings the wheel of Justice ‘full circle home’ to the guilty
-parties. The bustle and rapid succession of events in the last scenes is
-surprising. But the meeting between Lear and Cordelia is by far the most
-affecting part of them. It has all the wildness of poetry, and all the
-heart-felt truth of nature. The previous account of her reception of the
-news of his unkind treatment, her involuntary reproaches to her sisters,
-‘Shame, ladies, shame,’ Lear’s backwardness to see his daughter, the
-picture of the desolate state to which he is reduced, ‘Alack, ’tis he;
-why he was met even now, as mad as the vex’d sea, singing aloud,’ only
-prepare the way for and heighten our expectation of what follows, and
-assuredly this expectation is not disappointed when through the tender
-care of Cordelia he revives and recollects her.
-
- ‘_Cordelia._ How does my royal lord? How fares your majesty!
-
- _Lear._ You do me wrong, to take me out o’ the grave:
- Thou art a soul in bliss; but I am bound
- Upon a wheel of fire, that mine own tears
- Do scald like molten lead.
-
- _Cordelia._ Sir, do you know me?
-
- _Lear._ You are a spirit I know: when did you die?
-
- _Cordelia._ Still, still, far wide!
-
- _Physician._ He’s scarce awake; let him alone awhile.
-
- _Lear._ Where have I been? Where am I?—Fair daylight?——
- I am mightily abus’d.—I should even die with pity,
- To see another thus.—I know not what to say.——
- I will not swear these are my hands:—let’s see;
- I feel this pin prick. ‘Would I were assured
- Of my condition.
-
- _Cordelia._ O, look upon me, sir,
- And hold your hands in benediction o’er me:——
- No, sir, you must not kneel.
-
- _Lear._ Pray, do not mock me:
- I am a very foolish fond old man,
- Fourscore and upward;
- And, to deal plainly,
- I fear, I am not in my perfect mind.
- Methinks, I shou’d know you, and know this man;
- Yet I am doubtful: for I am mainly ignorant
- What place this is; and all the skill I have
- Remembers not these garments; nor I know not
- Where I did lodge last night: do not laugh at me;
- For, as I am a man, I think this lady
- To be my child Cordelia.
-
- _Cordelia._ And so I am, I am!’
-
-Almost equal to this in awful beauty is their consolation of each other
-when, after the triumph of their enemies, they are led to prison.
-
- ‘_Cordelia._ We are not the first,
- Who, with best meaning, have incurr’d the worst.
- For thee, oppressed king, am I cast down;
- Myself could else out-frown false fortune’s frown.—
- Shall we not see these daughters, and these sisters?
-
- _Lear._ No, no, no, no! Come, let’s away to prison:
- We two alone will sing like birds i’ the cage:
- When thou dost ask me blessing, I’ll kneel down,
- And ask of thee forgiveness: so we’ll live,
- And pray, and sing, and tell old tales, and laugh
- At gilded butterflies, and hear poor rogues
- Talk of court news; and we’ll talk with them too—
- Who loses, and who wins; who’s in, who’s out;—
- And take upon us the mystery of things,
- As if we were God’s spies: and we’ll wear out,
- In a wall’d prison, packs and sects of great ones,
- That ebb and flow by the moon.
-
- _Edmund._ Take them away.
-
- _Lear._ Upon such sacrifices, my Cordelia,
- The gods themselves throw incense.’
-
-The concluding events are sad, painfully sad; but their pathos is
-extreme. The oppression of the feelings is relieved by the very interest
-we take in the misfortunes of others, and by the reflections to which
-they give birth. Cordelia is hanged in prison by the orders of the
-bastard Edmund, which are known too late to be countermanded, and Lear
-dies broken-hearted, lamenting over her.
-
- ‘_Lear._ And my poor fool is hang’d! No, no, no life:
- Why should a dog, a horse, a rat, have life,
- And thou no breath at all? O, thou wilt come no more,
- Never, never, never, never, never!——
- Pray you, undo this button: thank you, sir.’
-
-He dies, and indeed we feel the truth of what Kent says on the occasion—
-
- ‘Vex not his ghost: O, let him pass! he hates him,
- That would upon the rack of this rough world
- Stretch him out longer.’
-
-Yet a happy ending has been contrived for this play, which is approved
-of by Dr. Johnson and condemned by Schlegel. A better authority than
-either, on any subject in which poetry and feeling are concerned, has
-given it in favour of Shakespear, in some remarks on the acting of Lear,
-with which we shall conclude this account:
-
- ‘The LEAR of Shakespear cannot be acted. The contemptible machinery
- with which they mimic the storm which he goes out in, is not more
- inadequate to represent the horrors of the real elements than any
- actor can be to represent Lear. The greatness of Lear is not in
- corporal dimension, but in intellectual; the explosions of his
- passions are terrible as a volcano: they are storms turning up and
- disclosing to the bottom that rich sea, his mind, with all its vast
- riches. It is his mind which is laid bare. This case of flesh and
- blood seems too insignificant to be thought on; even as he himself
- neglects it. On the stage we see nothing but corporal infirmities
- and weakness, the impotence of rage—while we read it, we see not
- Lear, but we are Lear;—we are in his mind; we are sustained by a
- grandeur, which baffles the malice of daughters and storms; in the
- aberrations of his reason, we discover a mighty irregular power of
- reasoning, immethodised from the ordinary purposes of life, but
- exerting its powers, as the wind blows where it listeth, at will on
- the corruptions and abuses of mankind. What have looks or tones to
- do with that sublime identification of his age with that of _the
- heavens themselves_, when in his reproaches to them for conniving at
- the injustice of his children, he reminds them that “they themselves
- are old!” What gesture shall we appropriate to this? What has the
- voice or the eye to do with such things? But the play is beyond all
- art, as the tamperings with it shew: it is too hard and stony: it
- must have love-scenes, and a happy ending. It is not enough that
- Cordelia is a daughter, she must shine as a lover too. Tate has put
- his hook in the nostrils of this Leviathan, for Garrick and his
- followers, the shew-men of the scene, to draw it about more easily.
- A happy ending!—as if the living martyrdom that Lear had gone
- through,—the flaying of his feelings alive, did not make a fair
- dismissal from the stage of life the only decorous thing for him. If
- he is to live and be happy after, if he could sustain this world’s
- burden after, why all this pudder and preparation—why torment us
- with all this unnecessary sympathy? As if the childish pleasure of
- getting his gilt robes and sceptre again could tempt him to act over
- again his misused station,—as if at his years and with his
- experience, any thing was left but to die.’[68]
-
-Four things have struck us in reading LEAR:
-
-1. That poetry is an interesting study, for this reason, that it relates
-to whatever is most interesting in human life. Whoever therefore has a
-contempt for poetry, has a contempt for himself and humanity.
-
-2. That the language of poetry is superior to the language of painting;
-because the strongest of our recollections relate to feelings, not to
-faces.
-
-3. That the greatest strength of genius is shewn in describing the
-strongest passions: for the power of the imagination, in works of
-invention, must be in proportion to the force of the natural
-impressions, which are the subject of them.
-
-4. That the circumstance which balances the pleasure against the pain in
-tragedy is, that in proportion to the greatness of the evil, is our
-sense and desire of the opposite good excited; and that our sympathy
-with actual suffering is lost in the strong impulse given to our natural
-affections, and carried away with the swelling tide of passion, that
-gushes from and relieves the heart.
-
-
- RICHARD II.
-
-RICHARD II. is a play little known compared with _Richard III._ which
-last is a play that every unfledged candidate for theatrical fame chuses
-to strut and fret his hour upon the stage in; yet we confess that we
-prefer the nature and feeling of the one to the noise and bustle of the
-other; at least, as we are so often forced to see it acted. In RICHARD
-II. the weakness of the king leaves us leisure to take a greater
-interest in the misfortunes of the man. After the first act, in which
-the arbitrariness of his behaviour only proves his want of resolution,
-we see him staggering under the unlooked-for blows of fortune, bewailing
-his loss of kingly power, not preventing it, sinking under the aspiring
-genius of Bolingbroke, his authority trampled on, his hopes failing him,
-and his pride crushed and broken down under insults and injuries, which
-his own misconduct had provoked, but which he has not courage or
-manliness to resent. The change of tone and behaviour in the two
-competitors for the throne according to their change of fortune, from
-the capricious sentence of banishment passed by Richard upon
-Bolingbroke, the suppliant offers and modest pretensions of the latter
-on his return to the high and haughty tone with which he accepts
-Richard’s resignation of the crown after the loss of all his power, the
-use which he makes of the deposed king to grace his triumphal progress
-through the streets of London, and the final intimation of his wish for
-his death, which immediately finds a servile executioner, is marked
-throughout with complete effect and without the slightest appearance of
-effort. The steps by which Bolingbroke mounts the throne are those by
-which Richard sinks into the grave. We feel neither respect nor love for
-the deposed monarch; for he is as wanting in energy as in principle: but
-we pity him, for he pities himself. His heart is by no means hardened
-against himself, but bleeds afresh at every new stroke of mischance, and
-his sensibility, absorbed in his own person, and unused to misfortune,
-is not only tenderly alive to its own sufferings, but without the
-fortitude to bear them. He is, however, human in his distresses; for to
-feel pain, and sorrow, weakness, disappointment, remorse and anguish, is
-the lot of humanity, and we sympathize with him accordingly. The
-sufferings of the man make us forget that he ever was a king.
-
-The right assumed by sovereign power to trifle at its will with the
-happiness of others as a matter of course, or to remit its exercise as a
-matter of favour, is strikingly shewn in the sentence of banishment so
-unjustly pronounced on Bolingbroke and Mowbray, and in what Bolingbroke
-says when four years of his banishment are taken off, with as little
-reason.
-
- ‘How long a time lies in one little word!
- Four lagging winters and four wanton springs
- End in a word: such is the breath of kings.’
-
-A more affecting image of the loneliness of a state of exile can hardly
-be given than by what Bolingbroke afterwards observes of his having
-‘sighed his English breath in foreign clouds’; or than that conveyed in
-Mowbray’s complaint at being banished for life.
-
- ‘The language I have learned these forty years,
- My native English, now I must forego;
- And now my tongue’s use is to me no more
- Than an unstringed viol or a harp,
- Or like a cunning instrument cas’d up,
- Or being open, put into his hands
- That knows no touch to tune the harmony.
- I am too old to fawn upon a nurse,
- Too far in years to be a pupil now.’—
-
-How very beautiful is all this, and at the same time how very _English_
-too!
-
-RICHARD II. may be considered as the first of that series of English
-historical plays, in which ‘is hung armour of the invincible knights of
-old,’ in which their hearts seem to strike against their coats of mail,
-where their blood tingles for the fight, and words are but the
-harbingers of blows. Of this state of accomplished barbarism the appeal
-of Bolingbroke and Mowbray is an admirable specimen. Another of these
-‘keen encounters of their wits,’ which serve to whet the talkers’
-swords, is where Aumerle answers in the presence of Bolingbroke to the
-charge which Bagot brings against him of being an accessory in Gloster’s
-death.
-
- ‘_Fitzwater._ If that thy valour stand on sympathies,
- There is my gage, Aumerle, in gage to thine;
- By that fair sun that shows me where thou stand’st,
- I heard thee say, and vauntingly thou spak’st it,
- That thou wert cause of noble Gloster’s death.
- If thou deny’st it twenty times thou liest,
- And I will turn thy falsehood to thy heart
- Where it was forged, with my rapier’s point.
-
- _Aumerle._ Thou dar’st not, coward, live to see the day.
-
- _Fitzwater._ Now, by my soul, I would it were this hour.
-
- _Aumerle._ Fitzwater, thou art damn’d to hell for this.
-
- _Percy._ Aumerle, thou liest; his honour is as true,
- In this appeal, as thou art all unjust;
- And that thou art so, there I throw my gage
- To prove it on thee, to the extremest point
- Of mortal breathing. Seize it, if thou dar’st.
-
- _Aumerle._ And if I do not, may my hands rot off,
- And never brandish more revengeful steel
- Over the glittering helmet of my foe.
- Who sets me else? By heav’n, I’ll throw at all.
- I have a thousand spirits in my breast,
- To answer twenty thousand such as you.
-
- _Surry._ My lord Fitzwater, I remember well
- The very time Aumerle and you did talk.
-
- _Fitzwater._ My lord, ’tis true: you were in presence then:
- And you can witness with me, this is true.
-
- _Surry._ As false, by heav’n, as heav’n itself is true.
-
- _Fitzwater._ Surry, thou liest.
-
- _Surry._ Dishonourable boy,
- That lie shall lye so heavy on my sword,
- That it shall render vengeance and revenge,
- Till thou the lie-giver and that lie rest
- In earth as quiet as thy father’s skull.
- In proof whereof, there is mine honour’s pawn:
- Engage it to the trial, if thou dar’st.
-
- _Fitzwater._ How fondly dost thou spur a forward horse:
- If I dare eat or drink, or breathe or live,
- I dare meet Surry in a wilderness,
- And spit upon him, whilst I say he lies,
- And lies, and lies: there is my bond of faith,
- To tie thee to thy strong correction.
- As I do hope to thrive in this new world,
- Aumerle is guilty of my true appeal.’
-
-The truth is, that there is neither truth nor honour in all these noble
-persons: they answer words with words, as they do blows with blows, in
-mere self defence: nor have they any principle whatever but that of
-courage in maintaining any wrong they dare commit, or any falsehood
-which they find it useful to assert. How different were these noble
-knights and ‘barons bold’ from their more refined descendants in the
-present day, who, instead of deciding questions of right by brute force,
-refer everything to convenience, fashion, and good breeding! In point of
-any abstract love of truth or justice, they are just the same now that
-they were then.
-
-The characters of old John of Gaunt and of his brother York, uncles to
-the King, the one stern and foreboding, the other honest, good-natured,
-doing all for the best, and therefore doing nothing, are well kept up.
-The speech of the former, in praise of England, is one of the most
-eloquent that ever was penned. We should perhaps hardly be disposed to
-feed the pampered egotism of our countrymen by quoting this description,
-were it not that the conclusion of it (which looks prophetic) may
-qualify any improper degree of exultation.
-
- ‘This royal throne of kings, this sceptered isle,
- This earth of Majesty, this seat of Mars,
- This other Eden, demi-Paradise,
- This fortress built by nature for herself
- Against infection and the hand of war;
- This happy breed of men, this little world,
- This precious stone set in the silver sea,
- Which serves it in the office of a wall,
- Or as a moat defensive to a house
- Against the envy of less happy lands:
- This blessed plot, this earth, this realm, this England,
- This nurse, this teeming womb of royal kings,
- Fear’d for their breed and famous for their birth,
- Renowned for their deeds as far from home,
- (For Christian service and true chivalry)
- As is the sepulchre in stubborn Jewry
- Of the world’s ransom, blessed Mary’s son;
- This land of such dear souls, this dear dear land,
- Dear for her reputation through the world,
- Is now leas’d out (I die pronouncing it)
- Like to a tenement or pelting farm.
- England bound in with the triumphant sea,
- Whose rocky shore beats back the envious surge
- Of wat’ry Neptune, is bound in with shame,
- With inky-blots and rotten parchment bonds.
- That England that was wont to conquer others,
- Hath made a shameful conquest of itself.’
-
-The character of Bolingbroke, afterwards Henry IV. is drawn with a
-masterly hand:—patient for occasion, and then steadily availing himself
-of it, seeing his advantage afar off, but only seizing on it when he has
-it within his reach, humble, crafty, bold, and aspiring, encroaching by
-regular but slow degrees, building power on opinion, and cementing
-opinion by power. His disposition is first unfolded by Richard himself,
-who however is too self-willed and secure to make a proper use of his
-knowledge.
-
- ‘Ourself and Bushy, Bagot here and Green,
- Observed his courtship of the common people:
- How he did seem to dive into their hearts,
- With humble and familiar courtesy,
- What reverence he did throw away on slaves;
- Wooing poor craftsmen with the craft of smiles,
- And patient under-bearing of his fortune,
- As ‘twere to banish their affections with him.
- Off goes his bonnet to an oyster-wench;
- A brace of draymen bid God speed him well,
- And had the tribute of his supple knee,
- With thanks my countrymen, my loving friends;
- As were our England in reversion his,
- And he our subjects’ next degree in hope.’
-
-Afterwards, he gives his own character to Percy, in these words:
-
- ‘I thank thee, gentle Percy, and be sure
- I count myself in nothing else so happy,
- As in a soul rememb’ring my good friends;
- And as my fortune ripens with thy love,
- It shall be still thy true love’s recompense.’
-
-We know how he afterwards kept his promise. His bold assertion of his
-own rights, his pretended submission to the king, and the ascendancy
-which he tacitly assumes over him without openly claiming it, as soon as
-he has him in his power, are characteristic traits of this ambitious and
-politic usurper. But the part of Richard himself gives the chief
-interest to the play. His folly, his vices, his misfortunes, his
-reluctance to part with the crown, his fear to keep it, his weak and
-womanish regrets, his starting tears, his fits of hectic passion, his
-smothered majesty, pass in succession before us, and make a picture as
-natural as it is affecting. Among the most striking touches of pathos
-are his wish ‘O that I were a mockery king of snow to melt away before
-the sun of Bolingbroke,’ and the incident of the poor groom who comes to
-visit him in prison, and tells him how ‘it yearned his heart that
-Bolingbroke upon his coronation-day rode on Roan Barbary.’ We shall have
-occasion to return hereafter to the character of Richard II. in speaking
-of Henry VI. There is only one passage more, the description of his
-entrance into London with Bolingbroke, which we should like to quote
-here, if it had not been so used and worn out, so thumbed and got by
-rote, so praised and painted; but its beauty surmounts all these
-considerations.
-
-
- ‘_Duchess._ My lord, you told me you would tell the rest,
- When weeping made you break the story off
- Of our two cousins coming into London.
-
- _York._ Where did I leave?
-
- _Duchess._ At that sad stop, my lord,
- Where rude misgovern’d hands, from window tops,
- Threw dust and rubbish on king Richard’s head.
-
- _York._ Then, as I said, the duke, great Bolingbroke,
- Mounted upon a hot and fiery steed,
- Which his aspiring rider seem’d to know,
- With slow, but stately pace, kept on his course,
- While all tongues cried—God save thee, Bolingbroke!
- You would have thought the very windows spake,
- So many greedy looks of young and old
- Through casements darted their desiring eyes
- Upon his visage; and that all the walls,
- With painted imag’ry, had said at once—
- Jesu preserve thee! welcome, Bolingbroke!
- Whilst he, from one side to the other turning,
- Bare-headed, lower than his proud steed’s neck,
- Bespake them thus—I thank you, countrymen:
- And thus still doing thus he pass’d along.
-
- _Duchess._ Alas, poor Richard! where rides he the while?
-
- _York._ As in a theatre, the eyes of men,
- After a well-grac’d actor leaves the stage,
- Are idly bent on him that enters next,
- Thinking his prattle to be tedious:
- Even so, or with much more contempt, men’s eyes
- Did scowl on Richard; no man cried God save him!
- No joyful tongue gave him his welcome home:
- But dust was thrown upon his sacred head!
- Which with such gentle sorrow he shook off—
- His face still combating with tears and smiles,
- The badges of his grief and patience—
- That had not God, for some strong purpose, steel’d
- The hearts of men, they must perforce have melted,
- And barbarism itself have pitied him.’
-
-
- HENRY IV
- IN TWO PARTS
-
-If Shakespear’s fondness for the ludicrous sometimes led to faults in
-his tragedies (which was not often the case) he has made us amends by
-the character of Falstaff. This is perhaps the most substantial comic
-character that ever was invented. Sir John carries a most portly
-presence in the mind’s eye; and in him, not to speak it profanely, ‘we
-behold the fulness of the spirit of wit and humour bodily.’ We are as
-well acquainted with his person as his mind, and his jokes come upon us
-with double force and relish from the quantity of flesh through which
-they make their way, as he shakes his fat sides with laughter, or ‘lards
-the lean earth as he walks along.’ Other comic characters seem, if we
-approach and handle them, to resolve themselves into air, ‘into thin
-air’; but this is embodied and palpable to the grossest apprehension: it
-lies ‘three fingers deep upon the ribs,’ it plays about the lungs and
-the diaphragm with all the force of animal enjoyment. His body is like a
-good estate to his mind, from which he receives rents and revenues of
-profit and pleasure in kind, according to its extent, and the richness
-of the soil. Wit is often a meagre substitute for pleasurable sensation;
-an effusion of spleen and petty spite at the comforts of others, from
-feeling none in itself. Falstaff’s wit is an emanation of a fine
-constitution; an exuberance of good-humour and good-nature; an
-overflowing of his love of laughter and good-fellowship; a giving vent
-to his heart’s ease, and over-contentment with himself and others. He
-would not be in character, if he were not so fat as he is; for there is
-the greatest keeping in the boundless luxury of his imagination and the
-pampered self-indulgence of his physical appetites. He manures and
-nourishes his mind with jests, as he does his body with sack and sugar.
-He carves out his jokes, as he would a capon or a haunch of venison,
-where there is _cut and come again_; and pours out upon them the oil of
-gladness. His tongue drops fatness, and in the chambers of his brain ‘it
-snows of meat and drink.’ He keeps up perpetual holiday and open house,
-and we live with him in a round of invitations to a rump and dozen.—Yet
-we are not to suppose that he was a mere sensualist. All this is as much
-in imagination as in reality. His sensuality does not engross and
-stupify his other faculties, but ‘ascends me into the brain, clears away
-all the dull, crude vapours that environ it, and makes it full of
-nimble, fiery, and delectable shapes.’ His imagination keeps up the ball
-after his senses have done with it. He seems to have even a greater
-enjoyment of the freedom from restraint, of good cheer, of his ease, of
-his vanity, in the ideal exaggerated description which he gives of them,
-than in fact. He never fails to enrich his discourse with allusions to
-eating and drinking, but we never see him at table. He carries his own
-larder about with him, and he is himself ‘a tun of man.’ His pulling out
-the bottle in the field of battle is a joke to shew his contempt for
-glory accompanied with danger, his systematic adherence to his Epicurean
-philosophy in the most trying circumstances. Again, such is his
-deliberate exaggeration of his own vices, that it does not seem quite
-certain whether the account of his hostess’s bill, found in his pocket,
-with such an out-of-the-way charge for capons and sack with only one
-halfpenny-worth of bread, was not put there by himself as a trick to
-humour the jest upon his favourite propensities, and as a conscious
-caricature of himself. He is represented as a liar, a braggart, a
-coward, a glutton, etc. and yet we are not offended but delighted with
-him; for he is all these as much to amuse others as to gratify himself.
-He openly assumes all these characters to shew the humourous part of
-them. The unrestrained indulgence of his own ease, appetites, and
-convenience, has neither malice nor hypocrisy in it. In a word, he is an
-actor in himself almost as much as upon the stage, and we no more object
-to the character of Falstaff in a moral point of view than we should
-think of bringing an excellent comedian, who should represent him to the
-life, before one of the police offices. We only consider the number of
-pleasant lights in which he puts certain foibles (the more pleasant as
-they are opposed to the received rules and necessary restraints of
-society) and do not trouble ourselves about the consequences resulting
-from them, for no mischievous consequences do result. Sir John is old as
-well as fat, which gives a melancholy retrospective tinge to the
-character; and by the disparity between his inclinations and his
-capacity for enjoyment, makes it still more ludicrous and fantastical.
-
-The secret of Falstaff’s wit is for the most part a masterly presence of
-mind, an absolute self-possession, which nothing can disturb. His
-repartees are involuntary suggestions of his self-love; instinctive
-evasions of every thing that threatens to interrupt the career of his
-triumphant jollity and self-complacency. His very size floats him out of
-all his difficulties in a sea of rich conceits; and he turns round on
-the pivot of his convenience, with every occasion and at a moment’s
-warning. His natural repugnance to every unpleasant thought or
-circumstance, of itself makes light of objections, and provokes the most
-extravagant and licentious answers in his own justification. His
-indifference to truth puts no check upon his invention, and the more
-improbable and unexpected his contrivances are, the more happily does he
-seem to be delivered of them, the anticipation of their effect acting as
-a stimulus to the gaiety of his fancy. The success of one adventurous
-sally gives him spirits to undertake another: he deals always in round
-numbers, and his exaggerations and excuses are ‘open, palpable,
-monstrous as the father that begets them.’ His dissolute carelessness of
-what he says discovers itself in the first dialogue with the Prince.
-
- ‘_Falstaff._ By the lord, thou say’st true, lad; and is not mine
- hostess of the tavern a most sweet wench?
-
- _P. Henry._ As the honey of Hibla, my old lad of the castle; and is
- not a buff-jerkin a most sweet robe of durance?
-
- _Falstaff._ How now, how now, mad wag, what in thy quips and thy
- quiddities? what a plague have I to do with a buff-jerkin?
-
- _P. Henry._ Why, what a pox have I to do with mine hostess of the
- tavern?’
-
-In the same scene he afterwards affects melancholy, from pure
-satisfaction of heart, and professes reform, because it is the farthest
-thing in the world from his thoughts. He has no qualms of conscience,
-and therefore would as soon talk of them as of anything else when the
-humour takes him.
-
- ‘_Falstaff._ But Hal, I pr’ythee trouble me no more with vanity. I
- would to God thou and I knew where a commodity of good names were to
- be bought: an old lord of council rated me the other day in the
- street about you, sir; but I mark’d him not, and yet he talked very
- wisely, and in the street too.
-
- _P. Henry._ Thou didst well, for wisdom cries out in the street, and
- no man regards it.
-
- _Falstaff._ O, thou hast damnable iteration, and art indeed able to
- corrupt a saint. Thou hast done much harm unto me, Hal; God forgive
- thee for it. Before I knew thee, Hal, I knew nothing, and now I am,
- if a man should speak truly, little better than one of the wicked. I
- must give over this life, and I will give it over, by the lord; an I
- do not, I am a villain. I’ll be damn’d for never a king’s son in
- Christendom.
-
- _P. Henry._ Where shall we take a purse to-morrow, Jack?
-
- _Falstaff._ Where thou wilt, lad, I’ll make one; an I do not, call
- me villain, and baffle me.
-
- _P. Henry._ I see good amendment of life in thee, from praying to
- purse-taking.
-
- _Falstaff._ Why, Hal, ’tis my vocation, Hal. ’Tis no sin for a man
- to labour in his vocation.’
-
-Of the other prominent passages, his account of his pretended resistance
-to the robbers, ‘who grew from four men in buckram into eleven’ as the
-imagination of his own valour increased with his relating it, his
-getting off when the truth is discovered by pretending he knew the
-Prince, the scene in which in the person of the old king he lectures the
-prince and gives himself a good character, the soliloquy on honour, and
-description of his new-raised recruits, his meeting with the chief
-justice, his abuse of the Prince and Poins, who overhear him, to Doll
-Tearsheet, his reconciliation with Mrs. Quickly who has arrested him for
-an old debt, and whom he persuades to pawn her plate to lend him ten
-pounds more, and the scenes with Shallow and Silence, are all
-inimitable. Of all of them, the scene in which Falstaff plays the part,
-first, of the King, and then of Prince Henry, is the one that has been
-the most often quoted. We must quote it once more in illustration of our
-remarks.
-
- ‘_Falstaff._ Harry, I do not only marvel where thou spendest thy
- time, but also how thou art accompanied: for though the camomile,
- the more it is trodden on, the faster it grows, yet youth, the more
- it is wasted, the sooner it wears. That thou art my son, I have
- partly thy mother’s word, partly my own opinion; but chiefly, a
- villainous trick of thine eye, and a foolish hanging of thy nether
- lip, that doth warrant me. If then thou be son to me, here lies the
- point;——Why, being son to me, art thou so pointed at? Shall the
- blessed sun of heaven prove a micher, and eat blackberries? A
- question not to be ask’d. Shall the son of England prove a thief,
- and take purses? a question not to be ask’d. There is a thing,
- Harry, which thou hast often heard of, and it is known to many in
- our land by the name of pitch: this pitch, as ancient writers do
- report, doth defile; so doth the company thou keepest: for, Harry,
- now I do not speak to thee in drink, but in tears; not in pleasure,
- but in passion; not in words only, but in woes also:—and yet there
- is a virtuous man, whom I have often noted in thy company, but I
- know not his name.
-
- _P. Henry._ What manner of man, an it like your majesty?
-
- _Falstaff._ A goodly portly man, i’faith, and a corpulent; of a
- cheerful look, a pleasing eye, and a most noble carriage; and, as I
- think, his age some fifty, or, by’r-lady, inclining to threescore;
- and now I do remember me, his name is Falstaff: if that man should
- be lewdly given, he deceiveth me; for, Harry, I see virtue in his
- looks. If then the fruit may be known by the tree, as the tree by
- the fruit, then peremptorily I speak it, there is virtue in that
- Falstaff: him keep with, the rest banish. And tell me now, thou
- naughty varlet, tell me, where hast thou been this month?
-
- _P. Henry._ Dost thou speak like a king? Do thou stand for me, and
- I’ll play my father.
-
- _Falstaff._ Depose me? if thou dost it half so gravely, so
- majestically, both in word and matter, hang me up by the heels for a
- rabbit-sucker, or a poulterer’s hare.
-
- _P. Henry._ Well, here I am set.
-
- _Falstaff._ And here I stand:—judge, my masters.
-
- _P. Henry._ Now, Harry, whence come you?
-
- _Falstaff._ My noble lord, from Eastcheap.
-
- _P. Henry._ The complaints I hear of thee are grievous.
-
- _Falstaff._ S’blood, my lord, they are false:—nay, I ‘ll tickle ye
- for a young prince, i’faith.
-
- _P. Henry._ Swearest thou, ungracious boy? henceforth ne’er look on
- me. Thou art violently carried away from grace: there is a devil
- haunts thee, in the likeness of a fat old man; a tun of man is thy
- companion. Why dost thou converse with that trunk of humours, that
- bolting-hutch of beastliness, that swoln parcel of dropsies, that
- huge bombard of sack, that stuft cloak-bag of guts, that roasted
- Manning-tree ox with the pudding in his belly, that reverend vice,
- that grey iniquity, that father ruffian, that vanity in years?
- wherein is he good, but to taste sack and drink it? wherein neat and
- cleanly, but to carve a capon and eat it? wherein cunning, but in
- craft? wherein crafty, but in villainy? wherein villainous, but in
- all things? wherein worthy, but in nothing?
-
- _Falstaff._ I would, your grace would take me with you; whom means
- your grace?
-
- _P. Henry._ That villainous, abominable mis-leader of youth,
- Falstaff, that old white-bearded Satan.
-
- _Falstaff._ My lord, the man I know.
-
- _P. Henry._ I know thou dost.
-
- _Falstaff._ But to say, I know more harm in him than in myself, were
- to say more than I know. That he is old (the more the pity) his
- white hairs do witness it: but that he is (saving your reverence) a
- whore-master, that I utterly deny. If sack and sugar be a fault, God
- help the wicked! if to be old and merry be a sin, then many an old
- host that I know is damned: if to be fat be to be hated, then
- Pharaoh’s lean kine are to be loved. No, my good lord; banish Peto,
- banish Bardolph, banish Poins: but for sweet Jack Falstaff, kind
- Jack Falstaff, true Jack Falstaff, valiant Jack Falstaff, and
- therefore more valiant, being as he is, old Jack Falstaff, banish
- not him thy Harry’s company; banish plump Jack, and banish all the
- world.
-
- _P. Henry._ I do, I will.
-
- [_Knocking; and Hostess and Bardolph go out._
-
- _Re-enter_ BARDOLPH, _running_.
-
- _Bardolph._ O, my lord, my lord; the sheriff, with a most monstrous
- watch, is at the door.
-
- _Falstaff._ Out, you rogue! play out the play: I have much to say in
- the behalf of that Falstaff.’
-
-One of the most characteristic descriptions of Sir John is that which
-Mrs. Quickly gives of him when he asks her ‘What is the gross sum that I
-owe thee?’
-
- ‘_Hostess._ Marry, if thou wert an honest man, thyself, and the
- money too. Thou didst swear to me upon a parcel-gilt goblet, sitting
- in my Dolphin-chamber, at the round table, by a sea-coal fire on
- Wednesday in Whitsun-week, when the prince broke thy head for
- likening his father to a singing man of Windsor; thou didst swear to
- me then, as I was washing thy wound, to marry me, and make me my
- lady thy wife. Canst thou deny it? Did not goodwife Keech, the
- butcher’s wife, come in then, and call me gossip Quickly? coming in
- to borrow a mess of vinegar; telling us, she had a good dish of
- prawns; whereby thou didst desire to eat some; whereby I told thee,
- they were ill for a green wound? And didst thou not, when she was
- gone down stairs, desire me to be no more so familiarity with such
- poor people; saying, that ere long they should call me madam? And
- didst thou not kiss me, and bid me fetch thee thirty shillings? I
- put thee now to thy book-oath; deny it, if thou canst.’
-
-This scene is to us the most convincing proof of Falstaff’s power of
-gaining over the good will of those he was familiar with, except indeed
-Bardolph’s somewhat profane exclamation on hearing the account of his
-death, ‘Would I were with him, wheresoe’er he is, whether in heaven or
-hell.’
-
-One of the topics of exulting superiority over others most common in Sir
-John’s mouth is his corpulence and the exterior marks of good living
-which he carries about him, thus ‘turning his vices into commodity.’ He
-accounts for the friendship between the Prince and Poins, from ‘their
-legs being both of a bigness’; and compares Justice Shallow to ‘a man
-made after supper of a cheese-paring.’ There cannot be a more striking
-gradation of character than that between Falstaff and Shallow, and
-Shallow and Silence. It seems difficult at first to fall lower than the
-squire; but this fool, great as he is, finds an admirer and humble foil
-in his cousin Silence. Vain of his acquaintance with Sir John, who makes
-a butt of him, he exclaims, ‘Would, cousin Silence, that thou had’st
-seen that which this knight and I have seen!’—‘Aye, Master Shallow, we
-have heard the chimes at midnight,’ says Sir John. To Falstaff’s
-observation ‘I did not think Master Silence had been a man of this
-mettle,’ Silence answers, ‘Who, I? I have been merry twice and once ere
-now.’ What an idea is here conveyed of a prodigality of living? What
-good husbandry and economical self-denial in his pleasures? What a stock
-of lively recollections? It is curious that Shakespear has ridiculed in
-Justice Shallow, who was ‘in some authority under the king,’ that
-disposition to unmeaning tautology which is the regal infirmity of later
-times, and which, it may be supposed, he acquired from talking to his
-cousin Silence, and receiving no answers.
-
- ‘_Falstaff._ You have here a goodly dwelling, and a rich.
-
- _Shallow._ Barren, barren, barren; beggars all, beggars all, Sir
- John: marry, good air. Spread Davy, spread Davy. Well said, Davy.
-
- _Falstaff._ This Davy serves you for good uses.
-
- _Shallow._ A good varlet, a good varlet, a very good varlet. By the
- mass, I have drank too much sack at supper. A good varlet. Now sit
- down, now sit down. Come, cousin.’
-
-The true spirit of humanity, the thorough knowledge of the stuff we are
-made of, the practical wisdom with the seeming fooleries in the whole of
-the garden-scene at Shallow’s country-seat, and just before in the
-exquisite dialogue between him and Silence on the death of old Double,
-have no parallel any where else. In one point of view, they are
-laughable in the extreme; in another they are equally affecting, if it
-is affecting to shew _what a little thing is human life_, what a poor
-forked creature man is!
-
-The heroic and serious part of these two plays founded on the story of
-Henry IV. is not inferior to the comic and farcical. The characters of
-Hotspur and Prince Henry are two of the most beautiful and dramatic,
-both in themselves and from contrast, that ever were drawn. They are the
-essence of chivalry. We like Hotspur the best upon the whole, perhaps
-because he was unfortunate.—The characters of their fathers, Henry IV.
-and old Northumberland, are kept up equally well. Henry naturally
-succeeds by his prudence and caution in keeping what he has got;
-Northumberland fails in his enterprise from an excess of the same
-quality, and is caught in the web of his own cold, dilatory policy. Owen
-Glendower is a masterly character. It as bold and original as it is
-intelligible and thoroughly natural. The disputes between him and
-Hotspur are managed with infinite address and insight into nature. We
-cannot help pointing out here some very beautiful lines, where Hotspur
-describes the fight between Glendower and Mortimer.
-
- ——‘When on the gentle Severn’s sedgy bank,
- In single opposition hand to hand,
- He did confound the best part of an hour
- In changing hardiment with great Glendower:
- Three times they breath’d, and three times did they drink,
- Upon agreement, of swift Severn’s flood;
- Who then affrighted with their bloody looks,
- Ran fearfully among the trembling reeds,
- And hid his crisp head in the hollow bank,
- Blood-stained with these valiant combatants.’
-
-The peculiarity and the excellence of Shakespear’s poetry is, that it
-seems as if he made his imagination the hand-maid of nature, and nature
-the plaything of his imagination. He appears to have been all the
-characters, and in all the situations he describes. It is as if either
-he had had all their feelings, or had lent them all his genius to
-express themselves. There cannot be stronger instances of this than
-Hotspur’s rage when Henry IV. forbids him to speak of Mortimer, his
-insensibility to all that his father and uncle urge to calm him, and his
-fine abstracted apostrophe to honour, ‘By heaven methinks it were an
-easy leap to pluck bright honour from the moon,’ etc. After all,
-notwithstanding the gallantry, generosity, good temper, and idle freaks
-of the mad-cap Prince of Wales, we should not have been sorry, if
-Northumberland’s force had come up in time to decide the fate of the
-battle at Shrewsbury; at least, we always heartily sympathise with Lady
-Percy’s grief, when she exclaims,
-
- ‘Had my sweet Harry had but half their numbers,
- To-day might I (hanging on Hotspur’s neck)
- Have talked of Monmouth’s grave.’
-
-The truth is, that we never could forgive the Prince’s treatment of
-Falstaff; though perhaps Shakespear knew what was best, according to the
-history, the nature of the times, and of the man. We speak only as
-dramatic critics. Whatever terror the French in those days might have of
-Henry V. yet, to the readers of poetry at present, Falstaff is the
-better man of the two. We think of him and quote him oftener.
-
-
- HENRY V.
-
-HENRY V. is a very favourite monarch with the English nation, and he
-appears to have been also a favourite with Shakespear, who labours hard
-to apologise for the actions of the king, by shewing us the character of
-the man, as ‘the king of good fellows.’ He scarcely deserves this
-honour. He was fond of war and low company:—we know little else of him.
-He was careless, dissolute, and ambitious;—idle, or doing mischief. In
-private, he seemed to have no idea of the common decencies of life,
-which he subjected to a kind of regal licence; in public affairs, he
-seemed to have no idea of any rule of right or wrong, but brute force,
-glossed over with a little religious hypocrisy and archiepiscopal
-advice. His principles did not change with his situation and
-professions. His adventure on Gadshill was a prelude to the affair of
-Agincourt, only a bloodless one; Falstaff was a puny prompter of
-violence and outrage, compared with the pious and politic Archbishop of
-Canterbury, who gave the king _carte blanche_, in a genealogical tree of
-his family, to rob and murder in circles of latitude and longitude
-abroad—to save the possessions of the church at home. This appears in
-the speeches in Shakespear, where the hidden motives that actuate
-princes and their advisers in war and policy are better laid open than
-in speeches from the throne or woolsack. Henry, because he did not know
-how to govern his own kingdom, determined to make war upon his
-neighbours. Because his own title to the crown was doubtful, he laid
-claim to that of France. Because he did not know how to exercise the
-enormous power, which had just dropped into his hands, to any one good
-purpose, he immediately undertook (a cheap and obvious resource of
-sovereignty) to do all the mischief he could. Even if absolute monarchs
-had the wit to find out objects of laudable ambition, they could only
-‘plume up their wills’ in adhering to the more sacred formula of the
-royal prerogative, ‘the right divine of kings to govern wrong,’ because
-will is only then triumphant when it is opposed to the will of others,
-because the pride of power is only then shewn, not when it consults the
-rights and interests of others, but when it insults and tramples on all
-justice and all humanity. Henry declares his resolution ‘when France is
-his, to bend it to his awe, or break it all to pieces’—a resolution
-worthy of a conqueror, to destroy all that he cannot enslave; and what
-adds to the joke, he lays all the blame of the consequences of his
-ambition on those who will not submit tamely to his tyranny. Such is the
-history of kingly power, from the beginning to the end of the
-world;—with this difference, that the object of war formerly, when the
-people adhered to their allegiance, was to depose kings; the object
-latterly, since the people swerved from their allegiance, has been to
-restore kings, and to make common cause against mankind. The object of
-our late invasion and conquest of France was to restore the legitimate
-monarch, the descendant of Hugh Capet, to the throne: Henry V. in his
-time made war on and deposed the descendant of this very Hugh Capet, on
-the plea that he was a usurper and illegitimate. What would the great
-modern catspaw of legitimacy and restorer of divine right have said to
-the claim of Henry and the title of the descendants of Hugh Capet? Henry
-V. it is true, was a hero, a King of England, and the conqueror of the
-king of France. Yet we feel little love or admiration for him. He was a
-hero, that is, he was ready to sacrifice his own life for the pleasure
-of destroying thousands of other lives: he was a king of England, but
-not a constitutional one, and we only like kings according to the law;
-lastly, he was a conqueror of the French king, and for this we dislike
-him less than if he had conquered the French people. How then do we like
-him? We like him in the play. There he is a very amiable monster, a very
-splendid pageant. As we like to gaze at a panther or a young lion in
-their cages in the Tower, and catch a pleasing horror from their
-glistening eyes, their velvet paws, and dreadless roar, so we take a
-very romantic, heroic, patriotic, and poetical delight in the boasts and
-feats of our younger Harry, as they appear on the stage and are confined
-to lines of ten syllables; where no blood follows the stroke that wounds
-our ears, where no harvest bends beneath horses’ hoofs, no city flames,
-no little child is butchered, no dead men’s bodies are found piled on
-heaps and festering the next morning—in the orchestra!
-
-So much for the politics of this play; now for the poetry. Perhaps one
-of the most striking images in all Shakespear is that given of war in
-the first lines of the Prologue.
-
- ‘O for a muse of fire, that would ascend
- The brightest heaven of invention,
- A kingdom for a stage, princes to act,
- And monarchs to behold the swelling scene!
- Then should the warlike Harry, like himself,
- Assume the port of Mars, and _at his heels
- Leash’d in like hounds, should famine, sword, and fire
- Crouch for employment_.’
-
-Rubens, if he had painted it, would not have improved upon this simile.
-
-The conversation between the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Bishop of
-Ely, relating to the sudden change in the manners of Henry V. is among
-the well-known _Beauties_ of Shakespear. It is indeed admirable both for
-strength and grace. It has sometimes occurred to us that Shakespear, in
-describing ‘the reformation’ of the Prince, might have had an eye to
-himself—
-
- ‘Which is a wonder how his grace should glean it,
- Since his addiction was to courses vain,
- His companies unletter’d, rude and shallow,
- His hours fill’d up with riots, banquets, sports;
- And never noted in him any study,
- Any retirement, any sequestration
- From open haunts and popularity.
-
- _Ely._ The strawberry grows underneath the nettle,
- And wholesome berries thrive and ripen best
- Neighbour’d by fruit of baser quality:
- And so the prince obscur’d his contemplation
- Under the veil of wildness, which no doubt
- Grew like the summer-grass, fastest by night,
- Unseen, yet crescive in his faculty.’
-
-This at least is as probable an account of the progress of the poet’s
-mind as we have met with in any of the Essays on the Learning of
-Shakespear.
-
-Nothing can be better managed than the caution which the king gives the
-meddling Archbishop, not to advise him rashly to engage in the war with
-France, his scrupulous dread of the consequences of that advice, and his
-eager desire to hear and follow it.
-
- ‘And God forbid, my dear and faithful lord,
- That you should fashion, wrest, or bow your reading,
- Or nicely charge your understanding soul
- With opening titles miscreate, whose right
- Suits not in native colours with the truth.
- For God doth know how many now in health
- Shall drop their blood, in approbation
- Of what your reverence shall incite us to.
- Therefore take heed how you impawn your person,
- How you awake our sleeping sword of war;
- We charge you in the name of God, take heed.
- For never two such kingdoms did contend
- Without much fall of blood, whose guiltless drops
- Are every one a woe, a sore complaint
- ‘Gainst him, whose wrong gives edge unto the swords
- That make such waste in brief mortality.
- Under this conjuration, speak, my lord;
- For we will hear, note, and believe in heart,
- That what you speak, is in your conscience wash’d,
- As pure as sin with baptism.’
-
-Another characteristic instance of the blindness of human nature to
-every thing but its own interests, is the complaint made by the king of
-‘the ill neighbourhood’ of the Scot in attacking England when she was
-attacking France.
-
- ‘For once the eagle England being in prey,
- To her unguarded nest the weazel Scot
- Comes sneaking, and so sucks her princely eggs.’
-
-It is worth observing that in all these plays, which give an admirable
-picture of the spirit of the _good old times_, the moral inference does
-not at all depend upon the nature of the actions, but on the dignity or
-meanness of the persons committing them. ‘The eagle England’ has a right
-‘to be in prey,’ but ‘the weazel Scot’ has none ‘to come sneaking to her
-nest,’ which she has left to pounce upon others. Might was right,
-without equivocation or disguise, in that heroic and chivalrous age. The
-substitution of right for might, even in theory, is among the
-refinements and abuses of modern philosophy.
-
-A more beautiful rhetorical delineation of the effects of subordination
-in a commonwealth can hardly be conceived than the following:—
-
- ‘For government, though high and low and lower,
- Put into parts, doth keep in one consent,
- Congruing in a full and natural close,
- Like music.
- ——Therefore heaven doth divide
- The state of man in divers functions,
- Setting endeavour in continual motion;
- To which is fixed, as an aim or butt,
- Obedience: for so work the honey-bees;
- Creatures that by a rule in nature, teach
- The art of order to a peopled kingdom.
- They have a king, and officers of sorts:
- Where some, like magistrates, correct at home;
- Others, like merchants, venture trade abroad;
- Others, like soldiers, armed in their stings,
- Make boot upon the summer’s velvet buds;
- Which pillage they with merry march bring home
- To the tent-royal of their emperor;
- Who, busied in his majesty, surveys
- The singing mason building roofs of gold;
- The civil citizens kneading up the honey;
- The poor mechanic porters crowding in
- Their heavy burthens at his narrow gate;
- The sad-eyed justice, with his surly hum,
- Delivering o’er to executors pale
- The lazy yawning drone. I this infer,—
- That many things, having full reference
- To one consent, may work contrariously:
- As many arrows, loosed several ways,
- Come to one mark;
- As many ways meet in one town;
- As many fresh streams meet in one salt sea;
- As many lines close in the dial’s centre;
- So may a thousand actions, once a-foot,
- End in one purpose, and be all well borne
- Without defeat.’
-
-HENRY V. is but one of Shakespear’s second-rate plays. Yet by quoting
-passages, like this, from his second-rate plays alone, we might make a
-volume ‘rich with his praise,’
-
- ‘As is the oozy bottom of the sea
- With sunken wrack and sumless treasuries.’
-
-Of this sort are the king’s remonstrance to Scroop, Grey, and Cambridge,
-on the detection of their treason, his address to the soldiers at the
-siege of Harfleur, and the still finer one before the battle of
-Agincourt, the description of the night before the battle, and the
-reflections on ceremony put into the mouth of the king.
-
- ‘O hard condition; twin-born with greatness,
- Subjected to the breath of every fool,
- Whose sense no more can feel but his own wringing!
- What infinite heart’s ease must kings neglect,
- That private men enjoy; and what have kings,
- That privates have not too, save ceremony?
- Save general ceremony?
- And what art thou, thou idol ceremony?
- What kind of God art thou, that suffer’st more
- Of mortal griefs, than do thy worshippers?
- What are thy rents? what are thy comings-in?
- O ceremony, shew me but thy worth!
- What is thy soul, O adoration?
- Art thou aught else but place, degree, and form,
- Creating awe and fear in other men?
- Wherein thou art less happy, being feared,
- Than they in fearing.
- What drink’st thou oft, instead of homage sweet,
- But poison’d flattery? O, be sick, great greatness,
- And bid thy ceremony give thee cure!
- Think’st thou, the fiery fever will go out
- With titles blown from adulation?
- Will it give place to flexure and low bending?
- Can’st thou, when thou command’st the beggar’s knee,
- Command the health of it? No, thou proud dream,
- That play’st so subtly with a king’s repose,
- I am a king, that find thee: and I know,
- ’Tis not the balm, the sceptre, and the ball,
- The sword, the mace, the crown imperial,
- The enter-tissu’d robe of gold and pearl,
- The farsed title running ‘fore the king,
- The throne he sits on, nor the tide of pomp
- That beats upon the high shore of this world,
- No, not all these, thrice-gorgeous ceremony,
- Not all these, laid in bed majestical,
- Can sleep so soundly as the wretched slave;
- Who, with a body fill’d, and vacant mind,
- Gets him to rest, cramm’d with distressful bread,
- Never sees horrid night, the child of hell:
- But like a lacquey, from the rise to set,
- Sweats in the eye of Phœbus, and all night
- Sleeps in Elysium; next day, after dawn,
- Doth rise, and help Hyperion to his horse;
- And follows so the ever-running year
- With profitable labour, to his grave:
- And, but for ceremony, such a wretch,
- Winding up days with toil, and nights with sleep,
- Has the forehand and vantage of a king.
- The slave, a member of the country’s peace,
- Enjoys it; but in gross brain little wots,
- What watch the king keeps to maintain the peace,
- Whose hours the peasant best advantages.’
-
-Most of these passages are well known: there is one, which we do not
-remember to have seen noticed, and yet it is no whit inferior to the
-rest in heroic beauty. It is the account of the deaths of York and
-Suffolk.
-
- ‘_Exeter._ The duke of York commends him to your majesty.
-
- _K. Henry._ Lives he, good uncle? thrice within this hour,
- I saw him down; thrice up again, and fighting;
- From helmet to the spur all blood he was.
-
- _Exeter._ In which array (brave soldier) doth he lie,
- Larding the plain: and by his bloody side
- (Yoke-fellow to his honour-owing wounds)
- The noble earl of Suffolk also lies.
- Suffolk first died: and York, all haggled o’er,
- Comes to him, where in gore he lay insteep’d,
- And takes him by the beard; kisses the gashes,
- That bloodily did yawn upon his face;
- And cries aloud—_Tarry, dear cousin Suffolk!
- My soul shall thine keep company to heaven:
- Tarry, sweet soul, for mine, then fly a-breast;
- As, in this glorious and well-foughten field,
- We kept together in our chivalry!_
- Upon these words I came, and cheer’d him up:
- He smil’d me in the face, raught me his hand,
- And, with a feeble gripe, says—_Dear my lord,
- Commend my service to my sovereign_.
- So did he turn, and over Suffolk’s neck
- He threw his wounded arm, and kiss’d his lips;
- And so, espous’d to death, with blood he seal’d
- A testament of noble-ending love.’
-
-But we must have done with splendid quotations. The behaviour of the
-king, in the difficult and doubtful circumstances in which he is placed,
-is as patient and modest as it is spirited and lofty in his prosperous
-fortune. The character of the French nobles is also very admirably
-depicted; and the Dauphin’s praise of his horse shews the vanity of that
-class of persons in a very striking point of view. Shakespear always
-accompanies a foolish prince with a satirical courtier, as we see in
-this instance. The comic parts of HENRY V. are very inferior to those of
-_Henry IV._ Falstaff is dead, and without him, Pistol, Nym, and
-Bardolph, are satellites without a sun. Fluellen the Welchman is the
-most entertaining character in the piece. He is good-natured, brave,
-choleric, and pedantic. His parallel between Alexander and Harry of
-Monmouth, and his desire to have ‘some disputations’ with Captain
-Macmorris on the discipline of the Roman wars, in the heat of the
-battle, are never to be forgotten. His treatment of Pistol is as good as
-Pistol’s treatment of his French prisoner. There are two other
-remarkable prose passages in this play: the conversation of Henry in
-disguise with the three centinels on the duties of a soldier, and his
-courtship of Katherine in broken French. We like them both exceedingly,
-though the first savours perhaps too much of the king, and the last too
-little of the lover.
-
-
- HENRY VI.
- IN THREE PARTS
-
-During the time of the civil wars of York and Lancaster, England was a
-perfect bear-garden, and Shakespear has given us a very lively picture
-of the scene. The three parts of HENRY VI. convey a picture of very
-little else; and are inferior to the other historical plays. They have
-brilliant passages; but the general ground-work is comparatively poor
-and meagre, the style ‘flat and unraised.’ There are few lines like the
-following:—
-
- ‘Glory is like a circle in the water;
- Which never ceaseth to enlarge itself,
- Till by broad spreading it disperse to nought.’
-
-The first part relates to the wars in France after the death of Henry V.
-and the story of the Maid of Orleans. She is here almost as scurvily
-treated as in Voltaire’s Pucelle. Talbot is a very magnificent sketch:
-there is something as formidable in this portrait of him, as there would
-be in a monumental figure of him or in the sight of the armour which he
-wore. The scene in which he visits the Countess of Auvergne, who seeks
-to entrap him, is a very spirited one, and his description of his own
-treatment while a prisoner to the French not less remarkable.
-
- ‘_Salisbury._ Yet tell’st thou not how thou wert entertain’d.
-
- _Talbot._ With scoffs and scorns, and contumelious taunts.
- In open market-place produced they me,
- To be a public spectacle to all.
- Here, said they, is the terror of the French,
- The scarecrow that affrights our children so.
- Then broke I from the officers that led me,
- And with my nails digg’d stones out of the ground,
- To hurl at the beholders of my shame.
- My grisly countenance made others fly,
- None durst come near for fear of sudden death.
- In iron walls they deem’d me not secure:
- So great a fear my name amongst them spread,
- That they suppos’d I could rend bars of steel,
- And spurn in pieces posts of adamant.
- Wherefore a guard of chosen shot I had:
- They walk’d about me every minute-while;
- And if I did but stir out of my bed,
- Ready they were to shoot me to the heart.’
-
-The second part relates chiefly to the contests between the nobles
-during the minority of Henry, and the death of Gloucester, the good Duke
-Humphrey. The character of Cardinal Beaufort is the most prominent in
-the group: the account of his death is one of our author’s
-master-pieces. So is the speech of Gloucester to the nobles on the loss
-of the provinces of France by the King’s marriage with Margaret of
-Anjou. The pretensions and growing ambition of the Duke of York, the
-father of Richard III. are also very ably developed. Among the episodes,
-the tragi-comedy of Jack Cade, and the detection of the impostor Simcox
-are truly edifying.
-
-The third part describes Henry’s loss of his crown: his death takes
-place in the last act, which is usually thrust into the common acting
-play of _Richard III._ The character of Gloucester, afterwards King
-Richard, is here very powerfully commenced, and his dangerous designs
-and long-reaching ambition are fully described in his soliloquy in the
-third act, beginning, ‘Aye, Edward will use women honourably.’ Henry VI.
-is drawn as distinctly as his high-spirited Queen, and notwithstanding
-the very mean figure which Henry makes as a King, we still feel more
-respect for him than for his wife.
-
-We have already observed that Shakespear was scarcely more remarkable
-for the force and marked contrasts of his characters than for the truth
-and subtlety with which he has distinguished those which approached the
-nearest to each other. For instance, the soul of Othello is hardly more
-distinct from that of Iago than that of Desdemona is shewn to be from
-Æmilia’s; the ambition of Macbeth is as distinct from the ambition of
-Richard III. as it is from the meekness of Duncan; the real madness of
-Lear is as different from the feigned madness of Edgar[69] as from the
-babbling of the fool; the contrast between wit and folly in Falstaff and
-Shallow is not more characteristic though more obvious than the
-gradations of folly, loquacious or reserved, in Shallow and Silence; and
-again, the gallantry of Prince Henry is as little confounded with that
-of Hotspur as with the cowardice of Falstaff, or as the sensual and
-philosophic cowardice of the Knight is with the pitiful and cringing
-cowardice of Parolles. All these several personages were as different in
-Shakespear as they would have been in themselves: his imagination
-borrowed from the life, and every circumstance, object, motive, passion,
-operated there as it would in reality, and produced a world of men and
-women as distinct, as true and as various as those that exist in nature.
-The peculiar property of Shakespear’s imagination was this truth,
-accompanied with the unconsciousness of nature: indeed, imagination to
-be perfect must be unconscious, at least in production; for nature is
-so.—We shall attempt one example more in the characters of Richard II.
-and Henry VI.
-
-The characters and situations of both these persons were so nearly
-alike, that they would have been completely confounded by a common-place
-poet. Yet they are kept quite distinct in Shakespear. Both were kings,
-and both unfortunate. Both lost their crowns owing to their
-mismanagement and imbecility; the one from a thoughtless, wilful abuse
-of power, the other from an indifference to it. The manner in which they
-bear their misfortunes corresponds exactly to the causes which led to
-them. The one is always lamenting the loss of his power which he has not
-the spirit to regain; the other seems only to regret that he had ever
-been king, and is glad to be rid of the power, with the trouble; the
-effeminacy of the one is that of a voluptuary, proud, revengeful,
-impatient of contradiction, and inconsolable in his misfortunes; the
-effeminacy of the other is that of an indolent, good-natured mind,
-naturally averse to the turmoils of ambition and the cares of greatness,
-and who wishes to pass his time in monkish indolence and
-contemplation.—Richard bewails the loss of the kingly power only as it
-was the means of gratifying his pride and luxury; Henry regards it only
-as a means of doing right, and is less desirous of the advantages to be
-derived from possessing it than afraid of exercising it wrong. In
-knighting a young soldier, he gives him ghostly advice—
-
- ‘Edward Plantagenet, arise a knight,
- And learn this lesson, draw thy sword in right.’
-
-Richard II. in the first speeches of the play betrays his real
-character. In the first alarm of his pride, on hearing of Bolingbroke’s
-rebellion, before his presumption has met with any check, he exclaims—
-
- ‘Mock not my senseless conjuration, lords:
- This earth shall have a feeling, and these stones
- Prove armed soldiers, ere her native king
- Shall faulter under proud rebellious arms.
-
- . . . . . .
-
- Not all the water in the rough rude sea
- Can wash the balm from an anointed king;
- The breath of worldly man cannot depose
- The Deputy elected by the Lord.
- For every man that Bolingbroke hath prest,
- To lift sharp steel against our golden crown,
- Heaven for his Richard hath in heavenly pay
- A glorious angel; then if angels fight,
- Weak men must fall; for Heaven still guards the right.’
-
-Yet, notwithstanding this royal confession of faith, on the very first
-news of actual disaster, all his conceit of himself as the peculiar
-favourite of Providence vanishes into air.
-
- ‘But now the blood of twenty thousand men
- Did triumph in my face, and they are fled.
- All souls that will be safe fly from my side;
- For time hath set a blot upon my pride.’
-
-Immediately after, however, recollecting that ‘cheap defence’ of the
-divinity of kings which is to be found in opinion, he is for arming his
-name against his enemies.
-
- ‘Awake, thou coward Majesty, thou sleep’st;
- Is not the King’s name forty thousand names?
- Arm, arm, my name: a puny subject strikes
- At thy great glory.’
-
-King Henry does not make any such vapouring resistance to the loss of
-his crown, but lets it slip from off his head as a weight which he is
-neither able nor willing to bear; stands quietly by to see the issue of
-the contest for his kingdom, as if it were a game at push-pin, and is
-pleased when the odds prove against him.
-
-When Richard first hears of the death of his favourites, Bushy, Bagot,
-and the rest, he indignantly rejects all idea of any further efforts,
-and only indulges in the extravagant impatience of his grief and his
-despair, in that fine speech which has been so often quoted:—
-
- ‘_Aumerle._ Where is the duke my father, with his power?
-
- _K. Richard._ No matter where: of comfort no man speak:
- Let’s talk of graves, of worms, and epitaphs,
- Make dust our paper, and with rainy eyes
- Write sorrow in the bosom of the earth!
- Let’s chuse executors, and talk of wills:
- And yet not so—for what can we bequeath,
- Save our deposed bodies to the ground?
- Our lands, our lives, and all are Bolingbroke’s,
- And nothing can we call our own but death,
- And that small model of the barren earth,
- Which serves as paste and cover to our bones.
- For heaven’s sake let us sit upon the ground,
- And tell sad stories of the death of Kings:
- How some have been depos’d, some slain in war;
- Some haunted by the ghosts they dispossess’d;
- Some poison’d by their wives, some sleeping kill’d;
- All murder’d:—for within the hollow crown,
- That rounds the mortal temples of a king,
- Keeps death his court: and there the antic sits,
- Scoffing his state, and grinning at his pomp!
- Allowing him a breath, a little scene
- To monarchize, be fear’d, and kill with looks;
- Infusing him with self and vain conceit—
- As if this flesh, which walls about our life,
- Were brass impregnable; and, humour’d thus,
- Comes at the last, and, with a little pin,
- Bores through his castle wall, and—farewell king!
- Cover your heads, and mock not flesh and blood
- With solemn reverence; throw away respect,
- Tradition, form, and ceremonious duty,
- For you have but mistook me all this while:
- I live on bread like you, feel want, taste grief,
- Need friends, like you;—subjected thus,
- How can you say to me—I am a king?’
-
-There is as little sincerity afterwards in his affected resignation to
-his fate, as there is fortitude in this exaggerated picture of his
-misfortunes before they have happened.
-
-When Northumberland comes back with the message from Bolingbroke, he
-exclaims, anticipating the result,—
-
- ‘What must the king do now? Must he submit?
- The king shall do it: must he be depos’d?
- The king shall be contented; must he lose
- The name of king? O’ God’s name let it go.
- I’ll give my jewels for a set of beads;
- My gorgeous palace for a hermitage;
- My gay apparel for an alms-man’s gown;
- My figur’d goblets for a dish of wood;
- My sceptre for a palmer’s walking staff;
- My subjects for a pair of carved saints,
- And my large kingdom for a little grave—
- A little, little grave, an obscure grave.’
-
-How differently is all this expressed in King Henry’s soliloquy, during
-the battle with Edward’s party:—
-
- ‘This battle fares like to the morning’s war,
- When dying clouds contend with growing light,
- What time the shepherd blowing of his nails,
- Can neither call it perfect day or night.
- Here on this mole-hill will I sit me down;
- To whom God will, there be the victory!
- For Margaret my Queen and Clifford too
- Have chid me from the battle, swearing both
- They prosper best of all when I am thence.
- Would I were dead, if God’s good will were so.
- For what is in this world but grief and woe?
- O God! methinks it were a happy life
- To be no better than a homely swain,
- To sit upon a hill as I do now,
- To carve out dials quaintly, point by point,
- Thereby to see the minutes how they run:
- How many make the hour full complete,
- How many hours bring about the day,
- How many days will finish up the year,
- How many years a mortal man may live.
- When this is known, then to divide the times;
- So many hours must I tend my flock,
- So many hours must I take my rest,
- So many hours must I contemplate,
- So many hours must I sport myself;
- So many days my ewes have been with young,
- So many weeks ere the poor fools will yean,
- So many months ere I shall shear the fleece:
- So many minutes, hours, weeks, months, and years
- Past over, to the end they were created,
- Would bring white hairs unto a quiet grave.
- Ah! what a life were this! how sweet, how lovely!
- Gives not the hawthorn bush a sweeter shade
- To shepherds looking on their silly sheep,
- Than doth a rich embroidered canopy
- To kings that fear their subjects’ treachery?
- O yes it doth, a thousand fold it doth.
- And to conclude, the shepherds’ homely curds,
- His cold thin drink out of his leather bottle,
- His wonted sleep under a fresh tree’s shade,
- All which secure and sweetly he enjoys,
- Is far beyond a prince’s delicates,
- His viands sparkling in a golden cup,
- His body couched in a curious bed,
- When care, mistrust, and treasons wait on him.’
-
-This is a true and beautiful description of a naturally quiet and
-contented disposition, and not, like the former, the splenetic effusion
-of disappointed ambition.
-
-In the last scene of _Richard II._ his despair lends him courage: he
-beats the keeper, slays two of his assassins, and dies with imprecations
-in his mouth against Sir Pierce Exton, who ‘had staggered his royal
-person.’ Henry, when he is seized by the deer-stealers, only reads them
-a moral lecture on the duty of allegiance and the sanctity of an oath;
-and when stabbed by Gloucester in the tower, reproaches him with his
-crimes, but pardons him his own death.
-
-
- RICHARD III.
-
-RICHARD III. may be considered as properly a stage-play: it belongs to
-the theatre, rather than to the closet. We shall therefore criticise it
-chiefly with a reference to the manner in which we have seen it
-performed. It is the character in which Garrick came out: it was the
-second character in which Mr. Kean appeared, and in which he acquired
-his fame. Shakespear we have always with us: actors we have only for a
-few seasons; and therefore some account of them may be acceptable, if
-not to our cotemporaries, to those who come after us, if ‘that rich and
-idle personage, Posterity,’ should deign to look into our writings.
-
-It is possible to form a higher conception of the character of Richard
-than that given by Mr. Kean: but we cannot imagine any character
-represented with greater distinctness and precision, more perfectly
-_articulated_ in every part. Perhaps indeed there is too much of what is
-technically called execution. When we first saw this celebrated actor in
-the part, we thought he sometimes failed from an exuberance of manner,
-and dissipated the impression of the general character by the variety of
-his resources. To be complete, his delineation of it should have more
-solidity, depth, sustained and impassioned feeling, with somewhat less
-brilliancy, with fewer glancing lights, pointed transitions, and
-pantomimic evolutions.
-
-The Richard of Shakespear is towering and lofty; equally impetuous and
-commanding; haughty, violent, and subtle; bold and treacherous;
-confident in his strength as well as in his cunning; raised high by his
-birth, and higher by his talents and his crimes; a royal usurper, a
-princely hypocrite, a tyrant, and a murderer of the house of
-Plantagenet.
-
- ‘But I was born so high:
- Our aery buildeth in the cedar’s top,
- And dallies with the wind, and scorns the sun.’
-
-The idea conveyed in these lines (which are indeed omitted in the
-miserable medley acted for RICHARD III.) is never lost sight of by
-Shakespear, and should not be out of the actor’s mind for a moment. The
-restless and sanguinary Richard is not a man striving to be great, but
-to be greater than he is; conscious of his strength of will, his power
-of intellect, his daring courage, his elevated station; and making use
-of these advantages to commit unheard-of crimes, and to shield himself
-from remorse and infamy.
-
-If Mr. Kean does not entirely succeed in concentrating all the lines of
-the character, as drawn by Shakespear, he gives an animation, vigour,
-and relief to the part which we have not seen equalled. He is more
-refined than Cooke; more bold, varied, and original than Kemble in the
-same character. In some parts he is deficient in dignity, and
-particularly in the scenes of state business, he has by no means an air
-of artificial authority. There is at times an aspiring elevation, an
-enthusiastic rapture in his expectations of attaining the crown, and at
-others a gloating expression of sullen delight, as if he already
-clenched the bauble, and held it in his grasp. The courtship scene with
-Lady Anne is an admirable exhibition of smooth and smiling villainy. The
-progress of wily adulation, of encroaching humility, is finely marked by
-his action, voice and eye. He seems, like the first Tempter, to approach
-his prey, secure of the event, and as if success had smoothed his way
-before him. The late Mr. Cooke’s manner of representing this scene was
-more vehement, hurried, and full of anxious uncertainty. This, though
-more natural in general, was less in character in this particular
-instance. Richard should woo less as a lover than as an actor—to shew
-his mental superiority, and power of making others the playthings of his
-purposes. Mr. Kean’s attitude in leaning against the side of the stage
-before he comes forward to address Lady Anne, is one of the most
-graceful and striking ever witnessed on the stage. It would do for
-Titian to paint. The frequent and rapid transition of his voice from the
-expression of the fiercest passion to the most familiar tones of
-conversation was that which gave a peculiar grace of novelty to his
-acting on his first appearance. This has been since imitated and
-caricatured by others, and he himself uses the artifice more sparingly
-than he did. His bye-play is excellent. His manner of bidding his
-friends ‘Good night,’ after pausing with the point of his sword, drawn
-slowly backward and forward on the ground, as if considering the plan of
-the battle next day, is a particularly happy and natural thought. He
-gives to the two last acts of the play the greatest animation and
-effect. He fills every part of the stage; and makes up for the
-deficiency of his person by what has been sometimes objected to as an
-excess of action. The concluding scene in which he is killed by Richmond
-is the most brilliant of the whole. He fights at last like one drunk
-with wounds; and the attitude in which he stands with his hands
-stretched out, after his sword is wrested from him, has a preternatural
-and terrific grandeur, as if his will could not be disarmed, and the
-very phantoms of his despair had power to kill.—Mr. Kean has since in a
-great measure effaced the impression of his Richard III. by the superior
-efforts of his genius in Othello (his master-piece), in the murder-scene
-in Macbeth, in Richard II., in Sir Giles Overreach, and lastly in
-Oroonoko; but we still like to look back to his first performance of
-this part, both because it first assured his admirers of his future
-success, and because we bore our feeble but, at that time, not useless
-testimony to the merits of this very original actor, on which the town
-was considerably divided for no other reason than because they _were_
-original.
-
-The manner in which Shakespear’s plays have been generally altered or
-rather mangled by modern mechanists, is a disgrace to the English stage.
-The patch-work RICHARD III. which is acted under the sanction of his
-name, and which was manufactured by Cibber, is a striking example of
-this remark.
-
-The play itself is undoubtedly a very powerful effusion of Shakespear’s
-genius. The ground-work of the character of Richard, that mixture of
-intellectual vigour with moral depravity, in which Shakespear delighted
-to shew his strength—gave full scope as well as temptation to the
-exercise of his imagination. The character of his hero is almost every
-where predominant, and marks its lurid track throughout. The original
-play is however too long for representation, and there are some few
-scenes which might be better spared than preserved, and by omitting
-which it would remain a complete whole. The only rule, indeed, for
-altering Shakespear is to retrench certain passages which may be
-considered either as superfluous or obsolete, but not to add or
-transpose any thing. The arrangement and developement of the story, and
-the mutual contrast and combination of the _dramatis personæ_, are in
-general as finely managed as the developement of the characters or the
-expression of the passions.
-
-This rule has not been adhered to in the present instance. Some of the
-most important and striking passages in the principal character have
-been omitted, to make room for idle and misplaced extracts from other
-plays; the only intention of which seems to have been to make the
-character of Richard as odious and disgusting as possible. It is
-apparently for no other purpose than to make Gloucester stab King Henry
-on the stage, that the fine abrupt introduction of the character in the
-opening of the play is lost in the tedious whining morality of the
-uxorious king (taken from another play);—we say _tedious_, because it
-interrupts the business of the scene, and loses its beauty and effect by
-having no intelligible connection with the previous character of the
-mild, well-meaning monarch. The passages which the unfortunate Henry has
-to recite are beautiful and pathetic in themselves, but they have
-nothing to do with the world that Richard has to ‘bustle in.’ In the
-same spirit of vulgar caricature is the scene between Richard and Lady
-Anne (when his wife) interpolated without any authority, merely to
-gratify this favourite propensity to disgust and loathing. With the same
-perverse consistency, Richard, after his last fatal struggle, is raised
-up by some Galvanic process, to utter the imprecation, without any
-motive but pure malignity, which Shakespear has so properly put into the
-mouth of Northumberland on hearing of Percy’s death. To make room for
-these worse than needless additions, many of the most striking passages
-in the real play have been omitted by the foppery and ignorance of the
-prompt-book critics. We do not mean to insist merely on passages which
-are fine as poetry and to the reader, such as Clarence’s dream, etc. but
-on those which are important to the understanding of the character, and
-peculiarly adapted for stage-effect. We will give the following as
-instances among several others. The first is the scene where Richard
-enters abruptly to the queen and her friends to defend himself:—
-
- ‘_Gloucester._ They do me wrong, and I will not endure it.
- Who are they that complain unto the king,
- That I forsooth am stern, and love them not?
- By holy Paul, they love his grace but lightly,
- That fill his ears with such dissentious rumours:
- Because I cannot flatter and look fair,
- Smile in men’s faces, smooth, deceive, and cog,
- Duck with French nods, and apish courtesy,
- I must be held a rancorous enemy.
- Cannot a plain man live, and think no harm,
- But thus his simple truth must be abus’d
- With silken, sly, insinuating Jacks?
-
- _Gray._ To whom in all this presence speaks your grace?
-
- _Gloucester._ To thee, that hast nor honesty nor grace;
- When have I injur’d thee, when done thee wrong?
- Or thee? or thee? or any of your faction?
- A plague upon you all!’
-
-Nothing can be more characteristic than the turbulent pretensions to
-meekness and simplicity in this address. Again, the versatility and
-adroitness of Richard is admirably described in the following ironical
-conversation with Brakenbury:—
-
- ‘_Brakenbury._ I beseech your graces both to pardon me.
- His majesty hath straitly given in charge,
- That no man shall have private conference,
- Of what degree soever, with your brother.
-
- _Gloucester._ E’en so, and please your worship, Brakenbury.
- You may partake of any thing we say:
- We speak no treason, man—we say the king
- Is wise and virtuous, and his noble queen
- Well strook in years, fair, and not jealous.
- We say that Shore’s wife hath a pretty foot,
- A cherry lip,
- A bonny eye, a passing pleasing tongue;
- That the queen’s kindred are made gentlefolks.
- How say you, sir? Can you deny all this?
-
- _Brakenbury._ With this, my lord, myself have nought to do.
-
- _Gloucester._ What, fellow, naught to do with mistress Shore?
- I tell you, sir, he that doth naught with her,
- Excepting one, were best to do it secretly alone.
-
- _Brakenbury._ What one, my lord?
-
- _Gloucester._ Her husband, knave—would’st thou betray me?’
-
-The feigned reconciliation of Gloucester with the queen’s kinsmen is
-also a master-piece. One of the finest strokes in the play, and which
-serves to shew as much as any thing the deep, plausible manners of
-Richard, is the unsuspecting security of Hastings, at the very time when
-the former is plotting his death, and when that very appearance of
-cordiality and good-humour on which Hastings builds his confidence
-arises from Richard’s consciousness of having betrayed him to his ruin.
-This, with the whole character of Hastings, is omitted.
-
-Perhaps the two most beautiful passages in the original play are the
-farewell apostrophe of the queen to the Tower, where the children are
-shut up from her, and Tyrrel’s description of their death. We will
-finish our quotations with them.
-
- ‘_Queen._ Stay, yet look back with me unto the Tower;
- Pity, you ancient stones, those tender babes,
- Whom envy hath immured within your walls;
- Rough cradle for such little pretty ones,
- Rude, rugged nurse, old sullen play-fellow,
- For tender princes!’
-
-The other passage is the account of their death by Tyrrel:—
-
- ‘Dighton and Forrest, whom I did suborn
- To do this piece of ruthless butchery,
- Albeit they were flesh’d villains, bloody dogs,—
- Melting with tenderness and mild compassion,
- Wept like to children in their death’s sad story:
- O thus! quoth Dighton, lay the gentle babes;
- Thus, thus, quoth Forrest, girdling one another
- Within their innocent alabaster arms;
- Their lips were four red roses on a stalk,
- And in that summer beauty kissed each other;
- A book of prayers on their pillow lay,
- Which once, quoth Forrest, almost changed my mind:
- But oh the devil!—there the villain stopped;
- When Dighton thus told on—we smothered
- The most replenished sweet work of nature,
- That from the prime creation ere she framed.’
-
-These are some of those wonderful bursts of feeling, done to the life,
-to the very height of fancy and nature, which our Shakespear alone could
-give. We do not insist on the repetition of these last passages as
-proper for the stage: we should indeed be loth to trust them in the
-mouth of almost any actor: but we should wish them to be retained in
-preference at least to the fantoccini exhibition of the young princes,
-Edward and York, bandying childish wit with their uncle.
-
-
- HENRY VIII.
-
-This play contains little action or violence of passion, yet it has
-considerable interest of a more mild and thoughtful cast, and some of
-the most striking passages in the author’s works. The character of Queen
-Katherine is the most perfect delineation of matronly dignity,
-sweetness, and resignation, that can be conceived. Her appeals to the
-protection of the king, her remonstrances to the cardinals, her
-conversations with her women, shew a noble and generous spirit
-accompanied with the utmost gentleness of nature. What can be more
-affecting than her answer to Campeius and Wolsey, who come to visit her
-as pretended friends.
-
- ——‘Nay, forsooth, my friends,
- They that must weigh out my afflictions,
- They that my trust must grow to, live not here;
- They are, as all my comforts are, far hence,
- In mine own country, lords.’
-
-Dr. Johnson observes of this play, that ‘the meek sorrows and virtuous
-distress of Katherine have furnished some scenes, which may be justly
-numbered among the greatest efforts of tragedy. But the genius of
-Shakespear comes in and goes out with Katherine. Every other part may be
-easily conceived and easily written.’ This is easily said; but with all
-due deference to so great a reputed authority as that of Johnson, it is
-not true. For instance, the scene of Buckingham led to execution is one
-of the most affecting and natural in Shakespear, and one to which there
-is hardly an approach in any other author. Again, the character of
-Wolsey, the description of his pride and of his fall, are inimitable,
-and have, besides their gorgeousness of effect, a pathos, which only the
-genius of Shakespear could lend to the distresses of a proud, bad man,
-like Wolsey. There is a sort of child-like simplicity in the very
-helplessness of his situation, arising from the recollection of his past
-overbearing ambition. After the cutting sarcasms of his enemies on his
-disgrace, against which he bears up with a spirit conscious of his own
-superiority, he breaks out into that fine apostrophe—
-
- ‘Farewell, a long farewell, to all my greatness!
- This is the state of man; to-day he puts forth
- The tender leaves of hope, to-morrow blossoms,
- And bears his blushing honours thick upon him;
- The third day comes a frost, a killing frost;
- And—when he thinks, good easy man, full surely
- His greatness is a ripening—nips his root,
- And then he falls, as I do. I have ventur’d,
- Like little wanton boys that swim on bladders,
- These many summers in a sea of glory;
- But far beyond my depth: my high-blown pride
- At length broke under me; and now has left me,
- Weary and old with service, to the mercy
- Of a rude stream, that must for ever hide me.
- Vain pomp and glory of the world, I hate ye!
- I feel my heart new open’d: O how wretched
- Is that poor man, that hangs on princes’ favours!
- There is betwixt that smile we would aspire to,
- That sweet aspect of princes, and our ruin,
- More pangs and fears than war and women have;
- And when he falls, he falls like Lucifer,
- Never to hope again!’—
-
-There is in this passage, as well as in the well-known dialogue with
-Cromwell which follows, something which stretches beyond commonplace;
-nor is the account which Griffiths gives of Wolsey’s death less
-Shakespearian; and the candour with which Queen Katherine listens to the
-praise of ‘him whom of all men while living she hated most’ adds the
-last graceful finishing to her character.
-
-Among other images of great individual beauty might be mentioned the
-description of the effect of Ann Boleyn’s presenting herself to the
-crowd at her coronation.
-
- ——‘While her grace sat down
- To rest awhile, some half an hour or so,
- In a rich chair of state, opposing freely
- The beauty of her person to the people.
- Believe me, sir, she is the goodliest woman
- That ever lay by man. Which when the people
- Had the full view of, _such a noise arose
- As the shrouds make at sea in a stiff tempest,
- As loud and to as many tunes_.’
-
-The character of Henry VIII. is drawn with great truth and spirit. It is
-like a very disagreeable portrait, sketched by the hand of a master. His
-gross appearance, his blustering demeanour, his vulgarity, his
-arrogance, his sensuality, his cruelty, his hypocrisy, his want of
-common decency and common humanity, are marked in strong lines. His
-traditional peculiarities of expression complete the reality of the
-picture. The authoritative expletive, ‘Ha!’ with which he intimates his
-indignation or surprise, has an effect like the first startling sound
-that breaks from a thunder-cloud. He is of all the monarchs in our
-history the most disgusting: for he unites in himself all the vices of
-barbarism and refinement, without their virtues. Other kings before him
-(such as Richard III.) were tyrants and murderers out of ambition or
-necessity: they gained or established unjust power by violent means:
-they destroyed their enemies, or those who barred their access to the
-throne or made its tenure insecure. But Henry VIII.‘s power is most
-fatal to those whom he loves: he is cruel and remorseless to pamper his
-luxurious appetites: bloody and voluptuous; an amorous murderer; an
-uxorious debauchee. His hardened insensibility to the feelings of others
-is strengthened by the most profligate self-indulgence. The religious
-hypocrisy, under which he masks his cruelty and his lust, is admirably
-displayed in the speech in which he describes the first misgivings of
-his conscience and its increasing throes and terrors, which have induced
-him to divorce his queen. The only thing in his favour in this play is
-his treatment of Cranmer: there is also another circumstance in his
-favour, which is his patronage of Hans Holbein.—It has been said of
-Shakespear—‘No maid could live near such a man.’ It might with as good
-reason be said—‘No king could live near such a man.’ His eye would have
-penetrated through the pomp of circumstance and the veil of opinion. As
-it is, he has represented such persons to the life—his plays are in this
-respect the glass of history—he has done them the same justice as if he
-had been a privy counsellor all his life, and in each successive reign.
-Kings ought never to be seen upon the stage. In the abstract, they are
-very disagreeable characters: it is only while living that they are ‘the
-best of kings.’ It is their power, their splendour, it is the
-apprehension of the personal consequences of their favour or their
-hatred that dazzles the imagination and suspends the judgment of their
-favourites or their vassals; but death cancels the bond of allegiance
-and of interest; and seen _as they were_, their power and their
-pretensions look monstrous and ridiculous. The charge brought against
-modern philosophy as inimical to loyalty is unjust, because it might as
-well be brought against other things. No reader of history can be a
-lover of kings. We have often wondered that Henry VIII. as he is drawn
-by Shakespear, and as we have seen him represented in all the bloated
-deformity of mind and person, is not hooted from the English stage.
-
-
- KING JOHN
-
-KING JOHN is the last of the historical plays we shall have to speak
-of; and we are not sorry that it is. If we are to indulge our
-imaginations, we had rather do it upon an imaginary theme; if we are
-to find subjects for the exercise of our pity and terror, we prefer
-seeking them in fictitious danger and fictitious distress. It gives a
-_soreness_ to our feelings of indignation or sympathy, when we know
-that in tracing the progress of sufferings and crimes, we are treading
-upon real ground, and recollect that the poet’s dream ‘_denoted a
-foregone conclusion_‘—irrevocable ills, not conjured up by fancy, but
-placed beyond the reach of poetical justice. That the treachery of
-King John, the death of Arthur, the grief of Constance, had a real
-truth in history, sharpens the sense of pain, while it hangs a leaden
-weight on the heart and the imagination. Something whispers us that we
-have no right to make a mock of calamities like these, or to turn the
-truth of things into the puppet and plaything of our fancies. ‘To
-consider thus’ may be ‘to consider too curiously’; but still we think
-that the actual truth of the particular events, in proportion as we
-are conscious of it, is a drawback on the pleasure as well as the
-dignity of tragedy.
-
-KING JOHN has all the beauties of language and all the richness of the
-imagination to relieve the painfulness of the subject. The character of
-King John himself is kept pretty much in the background; it is only
-marked in by comparatively slight indications. The crimes he is tempted
-to commit are such as are thrust upon him rather by circumstances and
-opportunity than of his own seeking: he is here represented as more
-cowardly than cruel, and as more contemptible than odious. The play
-embraces only a part of his history. There are however few characters on
-the stage that excite more disgust and loathing. He has no intellectual
-grandeur or strength of character to shield him from the indignation
-which his immediate conduct provokes: he stands naked and defenceless,
-in that respect, to the worst we can think of him: and besides, we are
-impelled to put the very worst construction on his meanness and cruelty
-by the tender picture of the beauty and helplessness of the object of
-it, as well as by the frantic and heart-rending pleadings of maternal
-despair. We do not forgive him the death of Arthur, because he had too
-late revoked his doom and tried to prevent it; and perhaps because he
-has himself repented of his black design, our _moral sense_ gains
-courage to hate him the more for it. We take him at his word, and think
-his purposes must be odious indeed, when he himself shrinks back from
-them. The scene in which King John suggests to Hubert the design of
-murdering his nephew is a master-piece of dramatic skill, but it is
-still inferior, very inferior to the scene between Hubert and Arthur,
-when the latter learns the orders to put out his eyes. If any thing ever
-was penned, heart-piercing, mixing the extremes of terror and pity, of
-that which shocks and that which soothes the mind, it is this scene. We
-will give it entire, though perhaps it is tasking the reader’s sympathy
-too much.
-
- ‘_Enter_ HUBERT _and Executioner_.
-
- _Hubert._ Heat me these irons hot, and look you stand
- Within the arras; when I strike my foot
- Upon the bosom of the ground, rush forth
- And bind the boy, which you shall find with me,
- Fast to the chair: be heedful: hence, and watch.
-
- _Executioner._ I hope your warrant will bear out the deed.
-
- _Hubert._ Uncleanly scruples! fear not you; look to’t.—
- Young lad, come forth; I have to say with you.
-
- _Enter_ ARTHUR.
-
- _Arthur._ Good morrow, Hubert.
-
- _Hubert._ Morrow, little Prince.
-
- _Arthur._ As little prince (having so great a title
- To be more prince) as may be. You are sad.
-
- _Hubert._ Indeed I have been merrier.
-
- _Arthur._ Mercy on me!
- Methinks no body should be sad but I;
- Yet I remember when I was in France,
- Young gentlemen would be as sad as night,
- Only for wantonness. By my Christendom,
- So were I out of prison, and kept sheep,
- I should be merry as the day is long.
- And so I would be here, but that I doubt
- My uncle practises more harm to me.
- He is afraid of me, and I of him.
-
- Is it my fault that I was Geoffrey’s son?
- Indeed it is not, and I would to heav’n
- I were your son, so you would love me, Hubert.
-
- _Hubert._ If I talk to him, with his innocent prate
- He will awake my mercy, which lies dead;
- Therefore I will be sudden, and dispatch. [_Aside._
-
- _Arthur._ Are you sick, Hubert? you look pale to-day?
- In sooth, I would you were a little sick,
- That I might sit all night and watch with you.
- Alas, I love you more than you do me.
-
- _Hubert._ His words do take possession of my bosom.
- Read here, young Arthur— [_Shewing a paper._
- How now, foolish rheum, [_Aside._
- Turning dis-piteous torture out of door!
- I must be brief, lest resolution drop
- Out at mine eyes in tender womanish tears.—
- Can you not read it? Is it not fair writ?
-
- _Arthur._ Too fairly, Hubert, for so foul effect.
- Must you with irons burn out both mine eyes?
-
- _Hubert._ Young boy, I must.
-
- _Arthur._ And will you?
-
- _Hubert._ And I will.
-
- _Arthur._ Have you the heart? When your head did but ache,
- I knit my handkerchief about your brows,
- (The best I had, a princess wrought it me)
- And I did never ask it you again;
- And with my hand at midnight held your head;
- And like the watchful minutes to the hour,
- Still and anon chear’d up the heavy time,
- Saying, what lack you? and where lies your grief?
- Or, what good love may I perform for you?
- Many a poor man’s son would have lain still,
- And ne’er have spoke a loving word to you;
- But you at your sick service had a prince.
- Nay, you may think my love was crafty love,
- And call it cunning. Do, and if you will:
- If heav’n be pleas’d that you must use me ill,
- Why then you must——Will you put out mine eyes?
- These eyes, that never did, and never shall,
- So much as frown on you?
-
- _Hubert._ I’ve sworn to do it;
- And with hot irons must I burn them out.
-
- _Arthur._ Oh if an angel should have come to me,
- And told me Hubert should put out mine eyes,
- I would not have believ’d a tongue but Hubert’s.
-
- _Hubert._ Come forth; do as I bid you. [_Stamps, and the men enter._
-
- _Arthur._ O save me, Hubert, save me! my eyes are out
- Ev’n with the fierce looks of these bloody men.
-
- _Hubert._ Give me the iron, I say, and bind him here.
-
-
- _Arthur._ Alas, what need you be so boist’rous rough?
- I will not struggle, I will stand stone-still.
- For heav’n’s sake, Hubert, let me not be bound!
- Nay, hear me, Hubert! drive these men away,
- And I will sit as quiet as a lamb:
- I will not stir, nor wince, nor speak a word,
- Nor look upon the iron angrily:
- Thrust but these men away, and I’ll forgive you,
- Whatever torment you do put me to.
-
- _Hubert._ Go, stand within; let me alone with him.
-
- _Executioner._ I am best pleas’d to be from such a deed. [_Exit._
-
- _Arthur._ Alas, I then have chid away my friend.
- He hath a stern look, but a gentle heart;
- Let him come back, that his compassion may
- Give life to yours.
-
- _Hubert._ Come, boy, prepare yourself.
-
- _Arthur._ Is there no remedy?
-
- _Hubert._ None, but to lose your eyes.
-
- _Arthur._ O heav’n! that there were but a mote in yours,
- A grain, a dust, a gnat, a wand’ring hair,
- Any annoyance in that precious sense!
- Then, feeling what small things are boist’rous there,
- Your vile intent must needs seem horrible.
-
- _Hubert._ Is this your promise? go to, hold your tongue.
-
- _Arthur._ Let me not hold my tongue; let me not, Hubert;
- Or, Hubert, if you will, cut out my tongue,
- So I may keep mine eyes. O spare mine eyes!
- Though to no use, but still to look on you.
- Lo, by my troth, the instrument is cold,
- And would not harm me.
-
- _Hubert._ I can heat it, boy.
-
- _Arthur._ No, in good sooth, the fire is dead with grief,
- Being create for comfort, to be us’d
- In undeserv’d extremes; see else yourself,
- There is no malice in this burning coal;
- The breath of heav’n hath blown its spirit out,
- And strew’d repentant ashes on its head.
-
- _Hubert._ But with my breath I can revive it, boy.
-
- _Arthur._ All things that you shall use to do me wrong,
- Deny their office; only you do lack
- That mercy which fierce fire and iron extend,
- Creatures of note for mercy-lacking uses.
-
- _Hubert._ Well, see to live; I will not touch thine eyes
- For all the treasure that thine uncle owns:
- Yet I am sworn, and I did purpose, boy,
- With this same very iron to burn them out.
-
- _Arthur._ O, now you look like Hubert. All this while
- You were disguised.
-
- _Hubert._ Peace; no more. Adieu,
-
- Your uncle must not know but you are dead.
- I’ll fill these dogged spies with false reports:
- And, pretty child, sleep doubtless and secure,
- That Hubert, for the wealth of all the world,
- Will not offend thee.
-
- _Arthur._ O heav’n! I thank you, Hubert.
-
- _Hubert._ Silence, no more; go closely in with me;
- Much danger do I undergo for thee. [_Exeunt._’
-
-His death afterwards, when he throws himself from his prison walls,
-excites the utmost pity for his innocence and friendless situation, and
-well justifies the exaggerated denunciations of Falconbridge to Hubert,
-whom he suspects wrongfully of the deed.
-
- ‘There is not yet so ugly a fiend of hell
- As thou shalt be, if thou did’st kill this child.
- —If thou did’st but consent
- To this most cruel act, do but despair:
- And if thou want’st a cord, the smallest thread
- That ever spider twisted from her womb
- Will strangle thee; a rush will be a beam
- To hang thee on: or would’st thou drown thyself,
- Put but a little water in a spoon,
- And it shall be as all the ocean,
- Enough to stifle such a villain up.’
-
-The excess of maternal tenderness, rendered desperate by the fickleness
-of friends and the injustice of fortune, and made stronger in will, in
-proportion to the want of all other power, was never more finely
-expressed than in Constance. The dignity of her answer to King Philip,
-when she refuses to accompany his messenger, ‘To me and to the state of
-my great grief, let kings assemble,’ her indignant reproach to Austria
-for deserting her cause, her invocation to death, ‘that love of misery,’
-however fine and spirited, all yield to the beauty of the passage,
-where, her passion subsiding into tenderness, she addresses the Cardinal
-in these words:—
-
- ‘Oh father Cardinal, I have heard you say
- That we shall see and know our friends in heav’n:
- If that be, I shall see my boy again,
- For since the birth of Cain, the first male child,
- To him that did but yesterday suspire,
- There was not such a gracious creature born.
- But now will canker-sorrow eat my bud,
- And chase the native beauty from his cheek,
- And he will look as hollow as a ghost,
- As dim and meagre as an ague’s fit,
- And so he’ll die; and rising so again,
- When I shall meet him in the court of heav’n,
- I shall not know him; therefore never, never
- Must I behold my pretty Arthur more.
-
- _K. Philip._ You are as fond of grief as of your child.
-
- _Constance._ Grief fills the room up of my absent child:
- Lies in his bed, walks up and down with me;
- Puts on his pretty looks, repeats his words,
- Remembers me of all his gracious parts;
- Stuffs out his vacant garments with his form.
- Then have I reason to be fond of grief.’
-
-The contrast between the mild resignation of Queen Katherine to her own
-wrongs, and the wild, uncontroulable affliction of Constance for the
-wrongs which she sustains as a mother, is no less naturally conceived
-than it is ably sustained throughout these two wonderful characters.
-
-The accompaniment of the comic character of the Bastard was well chosen
-to relieve the poignant agony of suffering, and the cold cowardly policy
-of behaviour in the principal characters of this play. Its spirit,
-invention, volubility of tongue and forwardness in action, are
-unbounded. _Aliquando sufflaminandus erat_, says Ben Jonson of
-Shakespear. But we should be sorry if Ben Jonson had been his licenser.
-We prefer the heedless magnanimity of his wit infinitely to all Jonson’s
-laborious caution. The character of the Bastard’s comic humour is the
-same in essence as that of other comic characters in Shakespear; they
-always run on with good things and are never exhausted; they are always
-daring and successful. They have words at will, and a flow of wit like a
-flow of animal spirits. The difference between Falconbridge and the
-others is that he is a soldier, and brings his wit to bear upon action,
-is courageous with his sword as well as tongue, and stimulates his
-gallantry by his jokes, his enemies feeling the sharpness of his blows
-and the sting of his sarcasms at the same time. Among his happiest
-sallies are his descanting on the composition of his own person, his
-invective against ‘commodity, tickling commodity,’ and his expression of
-contempt for the Archduke of Austria, who had killed his father, which
-begins in jest but ends in serious earnest. His conduct at the siege of
-Angiers shews that his resources were not confined to verbal
-retorts.—The same exposure of the policy of courts and camps, of kings,
-nobles, priests, and cardinals, takes place here as in the other plays
-we have gone through, and we shall not go into a disgusting repetition.
-
-This, like the other plays taken from English history, is written in a
-remarkably smooth and flowing style, very different from some of the
-tragedies, _Macbeth_, for instance. The passages consist of a series of
-single lines, not running into one another. This peculiarity in the
-versification, which is most common in the three parts of _Henry VI._
-has been assigned as a reason why those plays were not written by
-Shakespear. But the same structure of verse occurs in his other
-undoubted plays, as in _Richard II._ and in KING JOHN. The following are
-instances:—
-
- ‘That daughter there of Spain, the lady Blanch,
- Is near to England; look upon the years
- Of Lewis the dauphin, and that lovely maid.
- If lusty love should go in quest of beauty,
- Where should he find it fairer than in Blanch?
- If zealous love should go in search of virtue,
- Where should he find it purer than in Blanch?
- If love ambitious sought a match of birth,
- Whose veins bound richer blood than lady Blanch?
- Such as she is, in beauty, virtue, birth,
- Is the young dauphin every way complete:
- If not complete of, say he is not she;
- And she again wants nothing, to name want,
- If want it be not, that she is not he.
- He is the half part of a blessed man,
- Left to be finished by such as she;
- And she a fair divided excellence,
- Whose fulness of perfection lies in him.
- O, two such silver currents, when they join,
- Do glorify the banks that bound them in:
- And two such shores to two such streams made one,
- Two such controuling bounds, shall you be, kings,
- To these two princes, if you marry them.’
-
-Another instance, which is certainly very happy as an example of the
-simple enumeration of a number of particulars, is Salisbury’s
-remonstrance against the second crowning of the king.
-
- ‘Therefore to be possessed with double pomp,
- To guard a title that was rich before;
- To gild refined gold, to paint the lily,
- To throw a perfume on the violet,
- To smooth the ice, to add another hue
- Unto the rainbow, or with taper light
- To seek the beauteous eye of heav’n to garnish;
- Is wasteful and ridiculous excess.’
-
-
- TWELFTH NIGHT; OR, WHAT YOU WILL
-
-This is justly considered as one of the most delightful of Shakespear’s
-comedies. It is full of sweetness and pleasantry. It is perhaps too
-good-natured for comedy. It has little satire, and no spleen. It aims at
-the ludicrous rather than the ridiculous. It makes us laugh at the
-follies of mankind, not despise them, and still less bear any ill-will
-towards them. Shakespear’s comic genius resembles the bee rather in its
-power of extracting sweets from weeds or poisons, than in leaving a
-sting behind it. He gives the most amusing exaggeration of the
-prevailing foibles of his characters, but in a way that they themselves,
-instead of being offended at, would almost join in to humour; he rather
-contrives opportunities for them to shew themselves off in the happiest
-lights, than renders them contemptible in the perverse construction of
-the wit or malice of others.—There is a certain stage of society in
-which people become conscious of their peculiarities and absurdities,
-affect to disguise what they are, and set up pretensions to what they
-are not. This gives rise to a corresponding style of comedy, the object
-of which is to detect the disguises of self-love, and to make reprisals
-on these preposterous assumptions of vanity, by marking the contrast
-between the real and the affected character as severely as possible, and
-denying to those, who would impose on us for what they are not, even the
-merit which they have. This is the comedy of artificial life, of wit and
-satire, such as we see it in Congreve, Wycherley, Vanbrugh, etc. To this
-succeeds a state of society from which the same sort of affectation and
-pretence are banished by a greater knowledge of the world or by their
-successful exposure on the stage; and which by neutralising the
-materials of comic character, both natural and artificial, leaves no
-comedy at all—but _the sentimental_. Such is our modern comedy. There is
-a period in the progress of manners anterior to both these, in which the
-foibles and follies of individuals are of nature’s planting, not the
-growth of art or study; in which they are therefore unconscious of them
-themselves, or care not who knows them, if they can but have their whim
-out; and in which, as there is no attempt at imposition, the spectators
-rather receive pleasure from humouring the inclinations of the persons
-they laugh at, than wish to give them pain by exposing their absurdity.
-This may be called the comedy of nature, and it is the comedy which we
-generally find in Shakespear.—Whether the analysis here given be just or
-not, the spirit of his comedies is evidently quite distinct from that of
-the authors above mentioned, as it is in its essence the same with that
-of Cervantes, and also very frequently of Molière, though he was more
-systematic in his extravagance than Shakespear. Shakespear’s comedy is
-of a pastoral and poetical cast. Folly is indigenous to the soil, and
-shoots out with native, happy, unchecked luxuriance. Absurdity has every
-encouragement afforded it; and nonsense has room to flourish in. Nothing
-is stunted by the churlish, icy hand of indifference or severity. The
-poet runs riot in a conceit, and idolises a quibble. His whole object is
-to turn the meanest or rudest objects to a pleasurable account. The
-relish which he has of a pun, or of the quaint humour of a low
-character, does not interfere with the delight with which he describes a
-beautiful image, or the most refined love. The clown’s forced jests do
-not spoil the sweetness of the character of Viola; the same house is big
-enough to hold Malvolio, the Countess, Maria, Sir Toby, and Sir Andrew
-Ague-cheek. For instance, nothing can fall much lower than this last
-character in intellect or morals: yet how are his weaknesses nursed and
-dandled by Sir Toby into something ‘high fantastical,’ when on Sir
-Andrew’s commendation of himself for dancing and fencing, Sir Toby
-answers—‘Wherefore are these things hid? Wherefore have these gifts a
-curtain before them? Are they like to take dust like mistress Moll’s
-picture? Why dost thou not go to church in a galliard, and come home in
-a coranto? My very walk should be a jig! I would not so much as make
-water but in a cinque-pace. What dost thou mean? Is this a world to hide
-virtues in? I did think by the excellent constitution of thy leg, it was
-framed under the star of a galliard!’—How Sir Toby, Sir Andrew, and the
-Clown afterwards _chirp over their cups_, how they ‘rouse the night-owl
-in a catch, able to draw three souls out of one weaver!’ What can be
-better than Sir Toby’s unanswerable answer to Malvolio, ‘Dost thou
-think, because thou art virtuous, there shall be no more cakes and
-ale?’—In a word, the best turn is given to every thing, instead of the
-worst. There is a constant infusion of the romantic and enthusiastic, in
-proportion as the characters are natural and sincere: whereas, in the
-more artificial style of comedy, every thing gives way to ridicule and
-indifference, there being nothing left but affectation on one side, and
-incredulity on the other.—Much as we like Shakespear’s comedies, we
-cannot agree with Dr. Johnson that they are better than his tragedies;
-nor do we like them half so well. If his inclination to comedy sometimes
-led him to trifle with the seriousness of tragedy, the poetical and
-impassioned passages are the best parts of his comedies. The great and
-secret charm of TWELFTH NIGHT is the character of Viola. Much as we like
-catches and cakes and ale, there is something that we like better. We
-have a friendship for Sir Toby; we patronise Sir Andrew; we have an
-understanding with the Clown, a sneaking kindness for Maria and her
-rogueries; we feel a regard for Malvolio, and sympathise with his
-gravity, his smiles, his cross garters, his yellow stockings, and
-imprisonment in the stocks. But there is something that excites in us a
-stronger feeling than all this—it is Viola’s confession of her love.
-
- ‘_Duke._ What’s her history?
-
- _Viola._ _A blank, my lord, she never told her love_:
- She let concealment, like a worm i’ th’ bud,
- Feed on her damask cheek: she pin’d in thought,
- And with a green and yellow melancholy,
- She sat like Patience on a monument,
- Smiling at grief. _Was not this love indeed?_
- We men may say more, swear more, but indeed,
- Our shews are more than will; for still we prove
- Much in our vows, but little in our love.
-
- _Duke._ But died thy sister of her love, my boy?
-
- _Viola._ I am all the daughters of my father’s house,
- And all the brothers too;—and yet I know not.’—
-
-Shakespear alone could describe the effect of his own poetry.
-
- ‘Oh, it came o’er the ear like the sweet south
- That breathes upon a bank of violets,
- Stealing and giving odour.’
-
-What we so much admire here is not the image of Patience on a monument,
-which has been generally quoted, but the lines before and after it.
-‘They give a very echo to the seat where love is throned.’ How long ago
-it is since we first learnt to repeat them; and still, still they
-vibrate on the heart, like the sounds which the passing wind draws from
-the trembling strings of a harp left on some desert shore! There are
-other passages of not less impassioned sweetness. Such is Olivia’s
-address to Sebastian, whom she supposes to have already deceived her in
-a promise of marriage.
-
- ‘Blame not this haste of mine: if you mean well,
- Now go with me and with this holy man
- Into the chantry by: there before him,
- And underneath that consecrated roof,
- Plight me the full assurance of your faith,
- _That my most jealous and too doubtful soul
- May live at peace_.’
-
-We have already said something of Shakespear’s songs. One of the most
-beautiful of them occurs in this play, with a preface of his own to it.
-
- ‘_Duke._ O fellow, come, the song we had last night.
- Mark it, Cesario, it is old and plain;
- The spinsters and the knitters in the sun,
- And the free maids that weave their thread with bones,
- Do use to chaunt it: it is silly sooth,
- And dallies with the innocence of love,
- Like the old age.
-
- SONG.
-
- Come away, come away, death,
- And in sad cypress let me be laid;
- Fly away, fly away, breath;
- I am slain by a fair cruel maid.
- My shroud of white, stuck all with yew,
- O prepare it;
- My part of death no one so true
- Did share it.
-
- Not a flower, not a flower sweet,
- On my black coffin let there be strewn;
- Not a friend, not a friend greet
- My poor corpse, where my bones shall be thrown:
- A thousand thousand sighs to save,
- Lay me, O! where
- Sad true-love never find my grave,
- To weep there.’
-
-Who after this will say that Shakespear’s genius was only fitted for
-comedy? Yet after reading other parts of this play, and particularly the
-garden-scene where Malvolio picks up the letter, if we were to say that
-his genius for comedy was less than his genius for tragedy, it would
-perhaps only prove that our own taste in such matters is more saturnine
-than mercurial.
-
- ‘_Enter_ MARIA.
-
- _Sir Toby._ Here comes the little villain:—How now, my nettle of
- India?
-
- _Maria._ Get ye all three into the box-tree: Malvolio’s coming down
- this walk: he has been yonder i’ the sun, practising behaviour to
- his own shadow this half hour: observe him, for the love of mockery;
- for I know this letter will make a contemplative idiot of him.
- Close, in the name of jesting! Lie thou there; for here come’s the
- trout that must be caught with tickling.
-
- [_They hide themselves. Maria throws down a letter, and Exit._
-
- _Enter_ MALVOLIO.
-
- _Malvolio._ ’Tis but fortune; all is fortune. Maria once told me,
- she did affect me; and I have heard herself come thus near, that,
- should she fancy, it should be one of my complexion. Besides, she
- uses me with a more exalted respect than any one else that follows
- her. What should I think on’t?
-
- _Sir Toby._ Here’s an over-weening rogue!
-
- _Fabian._ O, peace! Contemplation makes a rare turkey-cock of him;
- how he jets under his advanced plumes!
-
- _Sir Andrew._ ‘Slight, I could so beat the rogue:—
-
- _Sir Toby._ Peace, I say.
-
- _Malvolio._ To be count Malvolio;—
-
- _Sir Toby._ Ah, rogue!
-
- _Sir Andrew._ Pistol him, pistol him.
-
- _Sir Toby._ Peace, peace!
-
- _Malvolio._ There is example for’t; the lady of the Strachy married
- the yeoman of the wardrobe.
-
- _Sir Andrew._ Fie on him, Jezebel!
-
- _Fabian._ O, peace! now he’s deeply in; look, how imagination blows
- him.
-
- _Malvolio._ Having been three months married to her, sitting in my
- chair of state,——
-
- _Sir Toby._ O for a stone bow, to hit him in the eye!
-
- _Malvolio._ Calling my officers about me, in my branch’d velvet
- gown; having come from a day-bed, where I have left Olivia sleeping.
-
- _Sir Toby._ Fire and brimstone!
-
- _Fabian._ O peace, peace!
-
- _Malvolio._ And then to have the humour of state: and after a demure
- travel of regard,——telling them, I know my place, as I would they
- should do theirs,—to ask for my kinsman Toby.——
-
- _Sir Toby._ Bolts and shackles!
-
- _Fabian._ O, peace, peace, peace! now, now.
-
- _Malvolio._ Seven of my people, with an obedient start, make out for
- him; I frown the while; and, perchance, wind up my watch, or play
- with some rich jewel. Toby approaches; curtsies there to me.
-
- _Sir Toby._ Shall this fellow live?
-
- _Fabian._ Though our silence be drawn from us with cares, yet peace.
-
- _Malvolio._ I extend my hand to him thus, quenching my familiar
- smile with an austere regard to controul.
-
- _Sir Toby._ And does not Toby take you a blow o’ the lips then?
-
- _Malvolio._ Saying—Cousin Toby, my fortunes having cast me on your
- niece, give me this prerogative of speech;—
-
- _Sir Toby._ What, what?
-
- _Malvolio._ You must amend your drunkenness.
-
- _Fabian._ Nay, patience, or we break the sinews of our plot.
-
- _Malvolio._ Besides, you waste the treasure of your time with a
- foolish knight—
-
- _Sir Andrew._ That’s me, I warrant you.
-
- _Malvolio._ One Sir Andrew——
-
- _Sir Andrew._ I knew, ’twas I; for many do call me fool.
-
- _Malvolio._ What employment have we here? [_Taking up the letter._’
-
-The letter and his comments on it are equally good. If poor Malvolio’s
-treatment afterwards is a little hard, poetical justice is done in the
-uneasiness which Olivia suffers on account of her mistaken attachment to
-Cesario, as her insensibility to the violence of the Duke’s passion is
-atoned for by the discovery of Viola’s concealed love of him.
-
-
- THE TWO GENTLEMEN OF VERONA
-
-This is little more than the first outlines of a comedy loosely sketched
-in. It is the story of a novel dramatised with very little labour or
-pretension; yet there are passages of high poetical spirit, and of
-inimitable quaintness of humour, which are undoubtedly Shakespear’s, and
-there is throughout the conduct of the fable a careless grace and
-felicity which marks it for his. One of the editors (we believe Mr.
-Pope) remarks in a marginal note to the TWO GENTLEMEN OF VERONA—
-
- ‘It is observable (I know not for what cause) that the style of this
- comedy is less figurative, and more natural and unaffected than the
- greater part of this author’s, though supposed to be one of the
- first he wrote.’
-
-Yet so little does the editor appear to have made up his mind upon this
-subject, that we find the following note to the very next (the second)
-scene.
-
- ‘This whole scene, like many others in these plays (some of which I
- believe were written by Shakespear, and others interpolated by the
- players) is composed of the lowest and most trifling conceits, to be
- accounted for only by the gross taste of the age he lived in:
- _Populo ut placerent_. I wish I had authority to leave them out, but
- I have done all I could, set a mark of reprobation upon them,
- throughout this edition.’
-
-It is strange that our fastidious critic should fall so soon from
-praising to reprobating. The style of the familiar parts of this comedy
-is indeed made up of conceits—low they may be for what we know, but then
-they are not poor, but rich ones. The scene of Launce with his dog (not
-that in the second, but that in the fourth act) is a perfect treat in
-the way of farcical drollery and invention; nor do we think Speed’s
-manner of proving his master to be in love deficient in wit or sense,
-though the style may be criticised as not simple enough for the modern
-taste.
-
- ‘_Valentine._ Why, how know you that I am in love?
-
- _Speed._ Marry, by these special marks: first, you have learned,
- like Sir Protheus, to wreathe your arms like a malcontent, to relish
- a love-song like a robin-red-breast, to walk alone like one that had
- the pestilence, to sigh like a school-boy that had lost his ABC, to
- weep like a young wench that had buried her grandam, to fast like
- one that takes diet, to watch like one that fears robbing, to speak
- puling like a beggar at Hallowmas. You were wont, when you laughed,
- to crow like a cock; when you walked, to walk like one of the lions;
- when you fasted, it was presently after dinner; when you looked
- sadly, it was for want of money; and now you are metamorphosed with
- a mistress, that when I look on you, I can hardly think you my
- master.’
-
-The tender scenes in this play, though not so highly wrought as in some
-others, have often much sweetness of sentiment and expression. There is
-something pretty and playful in the conversation of Julia with her maid,
-when she shews such a disposition to coquetry about receiving the letter
-from Protheus; and her behaviour afterwards and her disappointment, when
-she finds him faithless to his vows, remind us at a distance of Imogen’s
-tender constancy. Her answer to Lucetta, who advises her against
-following her lover in disguise, is a beautiful piece of poetry.
-
- ‘_Lucetta._ I do not seek to quench your love’s hot fire,
- But qualify the fire’s extremest rage,
- Lest it should burn above the bounds of reason.
-
- _Julia._ The more thou damm’st it up, the more it burns;
- The current that with gentle murmur glides,
- Thou know’st, being stopp’d, impatiently doth rage;
- But when his fair course is not hindered,
- He makes sweet music with th’ enamell’d stones,
- Giving a gentle kiss to every sedge
- He overtaketh in his pilgrimage:
- And so by many winding nooks he strays,
- With willing sport, to the wild ocean.[70]
- Then let me go, and hinder not my course;
- I’ll be as patient as a gentle stream,
- And make a pastime of each weary step,
- Till the last step have brought me to my love;
- And there I’ll rest, as after much turmoil,
- A blessed soul doth in Elysium.’
-
-If Shakespear indeed had written only this and other passages in the TWO
-GENTLEMEN OF VERONA, he would _almost_ have deserved Milton’s praise of
-him—
-
- ‘And sweetest Shakespear, Fancy’s child,
- Warbles his native wood-notes wild.’
-
-But as it is, he deserves rather more praise than this.
-
-
- THE MERCHANT OF VENICE
-
-This is a play that in spite of the change of manners and prejudices
-still holds undisputed possession of the stage. Shakespear’s malignant
-has outlived Mr. Cumberland’s benevolent Jew. In proportion as Shylock
-has ceased to be a popular bugbear, ‘baited with the rabble’s curse,’ he
-becomes a half-favourite with the philosophical part of the audience,
-who are disposed to think that Jewish revenge is at least as good as
-Christian injuries. Shylock is _a good hater_; ‘a man no less sinned
-against than sinning.’ If he carries his revenge too far, yet he has
-strong grounds for ‘the lodged hate he bears Anthonio,’ which he
-explains with equal force of eloquence and reason. He seems the
-depositary of the vengeance of his race; and though the long habit of
-brooding over daily insults and injuries has crusted over his temper
-with inveterate misanthropy, and hardened him against the contempt of
-mankind, this adds but little to the triumphant pretensions of his
-enemies. There is a strong, quick, and deep sense of justice mixed up
-with the gall and bitterness of his resentment. The constant
-apprehension of being burnt alive, plundered, banished, reviled, and
-trampled on, might be supposed to sour the most forbearing nature, and
-to take something from that ‘milk of human kindness,’ with which his
-persecutors contemplated his indignities. The desire of revenge is
-almost inseparable from the sense of wrong; and we can hardly help
-sympathising with the proud spirit, hid beneath his ‘Jewish gaberdine,’
-stung to madness by repeated undeserved provocations, and labouring to
-throw off the load of obloquy and oppression heaped upon him and all his
-tribe by one desperate act of ‘lawful’ revenge, till the ferociousness
-of the means by which he is to execute his purpose, and the pertinacity
-with which he adheres to it, turn us against him; but even at last, when
-disappointed of the sanguinary revenge with which he had glutted his
-hopes, and exposed to beggary and contempt by the letter of the law on
-which he had insisted with so little remorse, we pity him, and think him
-hardly dealt with by his judges. In all his answers and retorts upon his
-adversaries, he has the best not only of the argument but of the
-question, reasoning on their own principles and practice. They are so
-far from allowing of any measure of equal dealing, of common justice or
-humanity between themselves and the Jew, that even when they come to ask
-a favour of him, and Shylock reminds them that ‘on such a day they spit
-upon him, another spurned him, another called him dog, and for these
-curtesies request he’ll lend them so much monies’—Anthonio, his old
-enemy, instead of any acknowledgment of the shrewdness and justice of
-his remonstrance, which would have been preposterous in a respectable
-Catholic merchant in those times, threatens him with a repetition of the
-same treatment—
-
- ‘I am as like to call thee so again,
- To spit on thee again, to spurn thee too.’
-
-After this, the appeal to the Jew’s mercy, as if there were any common
-principle of right and wrong between them, is the rankest hypocrisy, or
-the blindest prejudice; and the Jew’s answer to one of Anthonio’s
-friends, who asks him what his pound of forfeit flesh is good for, is
-irresistible—
-
- To bait fish withal; if it will feed nothing else, it will feed my
- revenge. He hath disgrac’d me, and hinder’d me of half a million,
- laughed at my losses, mock’d at my gains, scorn’d my nation,
- thwarted my bargains, cool’d my friends, heated mine enemies; and
- what’s his reason? I am a Jew. Hath not a Jew eyes; hath not a Jew
- hands, organs, dimensions, senses, affections, passions; fed with
- the same food, hurt with the same weapons, subject to the same
- diseases, healed by the same means, warmed and cooled by the same
- winter and summer that a Christian is? If you prick us, do we not
- bleed? If you tickle us, do we not laugh? If you poison us, do we
- not die? And if you wrong us, shall we not revenge? If we are like
- you in the rest, we will resemble you in that. If a Jew wrong a
- Christian, what is his humility? revenge. If a Christian wrong a
- Jew, what should his sufferance be by Christian example? why
- revenge. The villainy you teach me I will execute, and it shall go
- hard but I will better the instruction.’
-
-The whole of the trial-scene, both before and after the entrance of
-Portia, is a master-piece of dramatic skill. The legal acuteness, the
-passionate declamations, the sound maxims of jurisprudence, the wit and
-irony interspersed in it, the fluctuations of hope and fear in the
-different persons, and the completeness and suddenness of the
-catastrophe, cannot be surpassed. Shylock, who is his own counsel,
-defends himself well, and is triumphant on all the general topics that
-are urged against him, and only fails through a legal flaw. Take the
-following as an instance:—
-
- ‘_Shylock._ What judgment shall I dread, doing no wrong?
- You have among you many a purchas’d slave,
- Which like your asses, and your dogs, and mules,
- You use in abject and in slavish part,
- Because you bought them:—shall I say to you,
- Let them be free, marry them to your heirs?
- Why sweat they under burdens? let their beds
- Be made as soft as yours, and let their palates
- Be season’d with such viands? you will answer,
- The slaves are ours:—so do I answer you:
- The pound of flesh, which I demand of him,
- Is dearly bought, is mine, and I will have it:
- If you deny me, fie upon your law!
- There is no force in the decrees of Venice:
- I stand for judgment: answer; shall I have it?’
-
-The keenness of his revenge awakes all his faculties; and he beats back
-all opposition to his purpose, whether grave or gay, whether of wit or
-argument, with an equal degree of earnestness and self-possession. His
-character is displayed as distinctly in other less prominent parts of
-the play, and we may collect from a few sentences the history of his
-life—his descent and origin, his thrift and domestic economy, his
-affection for his daughter, whom he loves next to his wealth, his
-courtship and his first present to Leah, his wife! ‘I would not have
-parted with it’ (the ring which he first gave her) ‘for a wilderness of
-monkies!’ What a fine Hebraism is implied in this expression!
-
-Portia is not a very great favourite with us; neither are we in love
-with her maid, Nerissa. Portia has a certain degree of affectation and
-pedantry about her, which is very unusual in Shakespear’s women, but
-which perhaps was a proper qualification for the office of a ‘civil
-doctor,’ which she undertakes and executes so successfully. The speech
-about Mercy is very well; but there are a thousand finer ones in
-Shakespear. We do not admire the scene of the caskets: and object
-entirely to the Black Prince, Morocchius. We should like Jessica better
-if she had not deceived and robbed her father, and Lorenzo, if he had
-not married a Jewess, though he thinks he has a right to wrong a Jew.
-The dialogue between this newly-married couple by moonlight, beginning
-‘On such a night,’ etc. is a collection of classical elegancies.
-Launcelot, the Jew’s man, is an honest fellow. The dilemma in which he
-describes himself placed between his ‘conscience and the fiend,’ the one
-of which advises him to run away from his master’s service and the other
-to stay in it, is exquisitely humourous.
-
-Gratiano is a very admirable subordinate character. He is the jester of
-the piece: yet one speech of his, in his own defence, contains a whole
-volume of wisdom.
-
- ‘_Anthonio._ I hold the world but as the world, Gratiano,
- A stage, where every one must play his part;
- And mine a sad one.
-
- _Gratiano._ Let me play the fool:
- With mirth and laughter let old wrinkles come;
- And let my liver rather heat with wine,
- Than my heart cool with mortifying groans.
- Why should a man, whose blood is warm within,
- Sit like his grandsire cut in alabaster?
- Sleep when he wakes? and creep into the jaundice
- By being peevish? I tell thee what, Anthonio—
- I love thee, and it is my love that speaks;—
- There are a sort of men, whose visages
- Do cream and mantle like a standing pond:
- And do a wilful stillness entertain,
- With purpose to be drest in an opinion
- Of wisdom, gravity, profound conceit;
- As who should say, _I am Sir Oracle,
- And when I ope my lips, let no dog bark_!
- O, my Anthonio, I do know of these,
- That therefore only are reputed wise,
- For saying nothing; who, I am very sure,
- If they should speak, would almost damn those ears,
- Which hearing them, would call their brothers, fools.
- I’ll tell thee more of this another time:
- But fish not with this melancholy bait,
- For this fool’s gudgeon, this opinion,’
-
-Gratiano’s speech on the philosophy of love, and the effect of habit in
-taking off the force of passion, is as full of spirit and good sense.
-The graceful winding up of this play in the fifth act, after the tragic
-business is despatched, is one of the happiest instances of Shakespear’s
-knowledge of the principles of the drama. We do not mean the pretended
-quarrel between Portia and Nerissa and their husbands about the rings,
-which is amusing enough, but the conversation just before and after the
-return of Portia to her own house, beginning ‘How sweet the moonlight
-sleeps upon this bank,’ and ending ‘Peace! how the moon sleeps with
-Endymion, and would not be awaked.’ There is a number of beautiful
-thoughts crowded into that short space, and linked together by the most
-natural transitions.
-
-When we first went to see Mr. Kean in Shylock, we expected to see, what
-we had been used to see, a decrepid old man, bent with age and ugly with
-mental deformity, grinning with deadly malice, with the venom of his
-heart congealed in the expression of his countenance, sullen, morose,
-gloomy, inflexible, brooding over one idea, that of his hatred, and
-fixed on one unalterable purpose, that of his revenge. We were
-disappointed, because we had taken our idea from other actors, not from
-the play. There is no proof there that Shylock is old, but a single
-line, ‘Bassanio and _old_ Shylock, both stand forth,’—which does not
-imply that he is infirm with age—and the circumstance that he has a
-daughter marriageable, which does not imply that he is old at all. It
-would be too much to say that his body should be made crooked and
-deformed to answer to his mind, which is bowed down and warped with
-prejudices and passion. That he has but one idea, is not true; he has
-more ideas than any other person in the piece; and if he is intense and
-inveterate in the pursuit of his purpose, he shews the utmost
-elasticity, vigour, and presence of mind, in the means of attaining it.
-But so rooted was our habitual impression of the part from seeing it
-caricatured in the representation, that it was only from a careful
-perusal of the play itself that we saw our error. The stage is not in
-general the best place to study our author’s characters in. It is too
-often filled with traditional common-place conceptions of the part,
-handed down from sire to son, and suited to the taste of _the great
-vulgar and the small_.—‘’Tis an unweeded garden: things rank and gross
-do merely gender in it!’ If a man of genius comes once in an age to
-clear away the rubbish, to make it fruitful and wholesome, they cry,
-‘’Tis a bad school: it may be like nature, it may be like Shakespear,
-but it is not like us.’ Admirable critics!
-
-
- THE WINTER’S TALE
-
-We wonder that Mr. Pope should have entertained doubts of the
-genuineness of this play. He was, we suppose, shocked (as a certain
-critic suggests) at the Chorus, Time, leaping over sixteen years with
-his crutch between the third and fourth act, and at Antigonus’s landing
-with the infant Perdita on the sea-coast of Bohemia. These slips or
-blemishes however do not prove it not to be Shakespear’s; for he was as
-likely to fall into them as any body; but we do not know any body but
-himself who could produce the beauties. The _stuff_ of which the tragic
-passion is composed, the romantic sweetness, the comic humour, are
-evidently his. Even the crabbed and tortuous style of the speeches of
-Leontes, reasoning on his own jealousy, beset with doubts and fears, and
-entangled more and more in the thorny labyrinth, bears every mark of
-Shakespear’s peculiar manner of conveying the painful struggle of
-different thoughts and feelings, labouring for utterance, and almost
-strangled in the birth. For instance:—
-
- ‘Ha’ not you seen, Camillo?
- (But that’s past doubt; you have, or your eye-glass
- Is thicker than a cuckold’s horn) or heard,
- (For to a vision so apparent, rumour
- Cannot be mute) or thought (for cogitation
- Resides not within man that does not think)
- My wife is slippery? If thou wilt, confess,
- Or else be impudently negative,
- To have nor eyes, nor ears, nor thought.’—
-
-Here Leontes is confounded with his passion, and does not know which way
-to turn himself, to give words to the anguish, rage, and apprehension,
-which tug at his breast. It is only as he is worked up into a clearer
-conviction of his wrongs by insisting on the grounds of his unjust
-suspicions to Camillo, who irritates him by his opposition, that he
-bursts out into the following vehement strain of bitter indignation: yet
-even here his passion staggers, and is as it were oppressed with its own
-intensity.
-
- ‘Is whispering nothing?
- Is leaning cheek to cheek? is meeting noses?
- Kissing with inside lip? stopping the career
- Of laughter with a sigh? (a note infallible
- Of breaking honesty!) horsing foot on foot?
- Skulking in corners? wishing clocks more swift?
- Hours, minutes? the noon, midnight? and all eyes
- Blind with the pin and web, but theirs; theirs only,
- That would, unseen, be wicked? is this nothing?
- Why then the world, and all that’s in’t, is nothing,
- The covering sky is nothing, Bohemia’s nothing,
- My wife is nothing!’
-
-The character of Hermione is as much distinguished by its saintlike
-resignation and patient forbearance, as that of Paulina is by her
-zealous and spirited remonstrances against the injustice done to the
-queen, and by her devoted attachment to her misfortunes. Hermione’s
-restoration to her husband and her child, after her long separation from
-them, is as affecting in itself as it is striking in the representation.
-Camillo, and the old shepherd and his son, are subordinate but not
-uninteresting instruments in the developement of the plot, and though
-last, not least, comes Autolycus, a very pleasant, thriving rogue; and
-(what is the best feather in the cap of all knavery) he escapes with
-impunity in the end.
-
-THE WINTER’S TALE is one of the best-acting of our author’s plays. We
-remember seeing it with great pleasure many years ago. It was on the
-night that King took leave of the stage, when he and Mrs. Jordan played
-together in the after-piece of the Wedding-day. Nothing could go off
-with more _éclat_, with more spirit, and grandeur of effect. Mrs.
-Siddons played Hermione, and in the last scene acted the painted statue
-to the life—with true monumental dignity and noble passion; Mr. Kemble,
-in Leontes, worked himself up into a very fine classical phrensy; and
-Bannister, as Autolycus, roared as loud for pity as a sturdy beggar
-could do who felt none of the pain he counterfeited, and was sound of
-wind and limb. We shall never see these parts so acted again; or if we
-did, it would be in vain. Actors grow old, or no longer surprise us by
-their novelty. But true poetry, like nature, is always young; and we
-still read the courtship of Florizel and Perdita, as we welcome the
-return of spring, with the same feelings as ever.
-
- ‘_Florizel._ Thou dearest Perdita,
- With these forc’d thoughts, I pr’ythee, darken not
- The mirth o’ the feast: or, I’ll be thine, my fair,
- Or not my father’s: for I cannot be
- Mine own, nor any thing to any, if
- I be not thine. To this I am most constant,
- Tho’ destiny say, No. Be merry, gentle;
- Strangle such thoughts as these, with any thing
- That you behold the while. Your guests are coming:
- Lift up your countenance; as it were the day
- Of celebration of that nuptial, which
- We two have sworn shall come.
-
- _Perdita._ O lady fortune,
- Stand you auspicious!
-
- _Enter Shepherd, Clown_, MOPSA, DORCAS, _Servants; with_ POLIXENES,
- _and_ CAMILLO, _disguised_.
-
- _Florizel._ See, your guests approach.
- Address yourself to entertain them sprightly,
- And let’s be red with mirth.
-
- _Shepherd._ Fie, daughter! when my old wife liv’d, upon
- This day, she was both pantler, butler, cook;
- Both dame and servant: welcom’d all, serv’d all:
- Would sing her song, and dance her turn: now here
- At upper end o’ the table, now i’ the middle:
- On his shoulder, and his: her face o’ fire
- With labour; and the thing she took to quench it
- She would to each one sip. You are retir’d,
- As if you were a feasted one, and not
- The hostess of the meeting. Pray you, bid
- These unknown friends to us welcome; for it is
- A way to make us better friends, more known.
- Come, quench your blushes; and present yourself
- That which you are, mistress o’ the feast. Come on,
- And bid us welcome to your sheep-shearing,
- As your good flock shall prosper.
-
- _Perdita._ Sir, welcome! [_To Polixenes and Camillo._
- It is my father’s will I should take on me
- The hostess-ship o’ the day: you’re welcome, sir!
-
- Give me those flowers there, Dorcas.—Reverend sirs,
- For you there’s rosemary and rue; these keep
- Seeming, and savour, all the winter long:
- Grace and remembrance be unto you both,
- And welcome to our shearing!
-
- _Polixenes._ Shepherdess,
- (A fair one are you) well you fit our ages
- With flowers of winter.
-
- _Perdita._ Sir, the year growing ancient,
- Not yet on summer’s death, nor on the birth
- Of trembling winter, the fairest flowers o’ the season
- Are our carnations, and streak’d gilly-flowers,
- Which some call nature’s bastards: of that kind
- Our rustic garden’s barren; and I care not
- To get slips of them.
-
- _Polixenes._ Wherefore, gentle maiden,
- Do you neglect them?
-
- _Perdita._ For I have heard it said
- There is an art, which, in their piedness, shares
- With great creating nature.
-
- _Polixenes._ Say, there be:
- Yet nature is made better by no mean,
- But nature makes that mean: so, o’er that art
- Which you say, adds to nature, is an art
- That nature makes. You see, sweet maid, we marry
- A gentler scyon to the wildest stock;
- And make conceive a bark of baser kind
- By bud of nobler race. This is an art
- Which does mend nature, change it rather: but
- The art itself is nature.
-
- _Perdita._ So it is.[71]
-
- _Polixenes._ Then make your garden rich in gilly-flowers,
- And do not call them bastards.
-
- _Perdita._ I’ll not put
- The dibble in earth, to set one slip of them;[71]
- No more than, were I painted, I would wish
- This youth should say, ‘twere well; and only therefore
- Desire to breed by me.—Here’s flowers for you;
- Hot lavender, mints, savoury, marjoram;
- The marigold, that goes to bed with the sun,
- And with him rises, weeping: these are flowers
- Of middle summer, and, I think, they are given
- To men of middle age. You are very welcome.
-
- _Camillo._ I should leave grazing, were I of your flock,
- And only live by gazing.
-
- _Perdita._ Out, alas!
- You’d be so lean, that blasts of January
-
- Would blow you through and through. Now my fairest friends,
- I would I had some flowers o’ the spring, that might
- Become your time of day; and your’s, and your’s,
- That wear upon your virgin branches yet
- Your maiden-heads growing: O Proserpina,
- For the flowers now, that, frighted, thou let’st fall
- From Dis’s waggon! daffodils,
- That come before the swallow dares, and take
- The winds of March with beauty: violets dim,
- But sweeter than the lids of Juno’s eyes,
- Or Cytherea’s breath; pale primroses,
- That die unmarried, ere they can behold
- Bright Phœbus in his strength (a malady
- Most incident to maids); bold oxlips, and
- The crown-imperial; lilies of all kinds,
- The fleur-de-lis being one! O, these I lack
- To make you garlands of; and my sweet friend
- To strow him o’er and o’er.
-
- _Florizel._ What, like a corse?
-
- _Perdita._ No, like a bank, for love to lie and play on;
- Not like a corse; or if—not to be buried,
- But quick, and in mine arms. Come take your flowers;
- Methinks, I play as I have seen them do
- In Whitsun pastorals: sure this robe of mine
- Does change my disposition.
-
- _Florizel._ What you do,
- Still betters what is done. When you speak, sweet,
- I’d have you do it ever: when you sing,
- I’d have you buy and sell so; so, give alms;
- Pray, so; and for the ordering your affairs,
- To sing them too. When you do dance, I wish you
- A wave o’ the sea, that you might ever do
- Nothing but that: move still, still so,
- And own no other function. Each your doing,
- So singular in each particular,
- Crowns what you’re doing in the present deeds,
- That all your acts are queens.
-
- _Perdita._ O Doricles,
- Your praises are too large; but that your youth
- And the true blood, which peeps forth fairly through it,
- Do plainly give you out an unstained shepherd;
- With wisdom I might fear, my Doricles,
- You woo’d me the false way.
-
- _Florizel._ I think you have
- As little skill to fear, as I have purpose
- To put you to’t. But come, our dance, I pray:
- Your hand, my Perdita: so turtles pair,
- That never mean to part.
-
- _Perdita._ I’ll swear for ‘em.
-
-
- _Polixenes._ This is the prettiest low-born lass that ever
- Ran on the green-sward; nothing she does, or seems,
- But smacks of something greater than herself,
- Too noble for this place.
-
- _Camillo._ He tells her something
- That makes her blood look out: good sooth she is
- The queen of curds and cream.’
-
-This delicious scene is interrupted by the father of the prince
-discovering himself to Florizel, and haughtily breaking off the intended
-match between his son and Perdita. When Polixenes goes out, Perdita
-says,
-
- ‘Even here undone:
- I was not much afraid; for once or twice
- I was about to speak; and tell him plainly,
- The self-same sun that shines upon his court,
- Hides not his visage from our cottage, but
- Looks on’t alike. Wilt please you, sir, be gone? [_To Florizel._
- I told you what would come of this. Beseech you,
- Of your own state take care: this dream of mine,
- Being now awake, I’ll queen it no inch farther,
- But milk my ewes and weep.’
-
-As Perdita, the supposed shepherdess, turns out to be the daughter of
-Hermione, and a princess in disguise, both feelings of the pride of
-birth and the claims of nature are satisfied by the fortunate event of
-the story, and the fine romance of poetry is reconciled to the strictest
-court-etiquette.
-
-
- ALL’S WELL THAT ENDS WELL
-
-ALL’S WELL THAT ENDS WELL is one of the most pleasing of our author’s
-comedies. The interest is however more of a serious than of a comic
-nature. The character of Helen is one of great sweetness and delicacy.
-She is placed in circumstances of the most critical kind, and has to
-court her husband both as a virgin and a wife: yet the most scrupulous
-nicety of female modesty is not once violated. There is not one thought
-or action that ought to bring a blush into her cheeks, or that for a
-moment lessens her in our esteem. Perhaps the romantic attachment of a
-beautiful and virtuous girl to one placed above her hopes by the
-circumstances of birth and fortune, was never so exquisitely expressed
-as in the reflections which she utters when young Roussillon leaves his
-mother’s house, under whose protection she has been brought up with him,
-to repair to the French king’s court.
-
- ‘_Helena._ Oh, were that all—I think not on my father,
- And these great tears grace his remembrance more
- Than those I shed for him. What was he like?
- I have forgot him. My imagination
- Carries no favour in it, but Bertram’s.
- I am undone, there is no living, none
- If Bertram be away. It were all one
- That I should love a bright particular star,
- And think to wed it; he is so above me:
- In his bright radiance and collateral light
- Must I be comforted, not in his sphere.
- Th’ ambition in my love thus plagues itself;
- The hind that would be mated by the lion,
- Must die for love. ’Twas pretty, tho’ a plague,
- To see him every hour, to sit and draw
- His arched brows, his hawking eye, his curls
- In our heart’s table: heart too capable
- Of every line and trick of his sweet favour.
- But now he’s gone, and my idolatrous fancy
- Must sanctify his relics.’
-
-The interest excited by this beautiful picture of a fond and innocent
-heart is kept up afterwards by her resolution to follow him to France,
-the success of her experiment in restoring the king’s health, her
-demanding Bertram in marriage as a recompense, his leaving her in
-disdain, her interview with him afterwards disguised as Diana, a young
-lady whom he importunes with his secret addresses, and their final
-reconciliation when the consequences of her stratagem and the proofs of
-her love are fully made known. The persevering gratitude of the French
-king to his benefactress, who cures him of a languishing distemper by a
-prescription hereditary in her family, the indulgent kindness of the
-Countess, whose pride of birth yields, almost without a struggle, to her
-affection for Helen, the honesty and uprightness of the good old lord
-Lafeu, make very interesting parts of the picture. The wilful
-stubbornness and youthful petulance of Bertram are also very admirably
-described. The comic part of the play turns on the folly, boasting, and
-cowardice of Parolles, a parasite and hanger-on of Bertram’s, the
-detection of whose false pretensions to bravery and honour forms a very
-amusing episode. He is first found out by the old lord Lafeu, who says,
-‘The soul of this man is in his clothes’; and it is proved afterwards
-that his heart is in his tongue, and that both are false and hollow. The
-adventure of ‘the bringing off of his drum’ has become proverbial as a
-satire on all ridiculous and blustering undertakings which the person
-never means to perform: nor can any thing be more severe than what one
-of the bye-standers remarks upon what Parolles says of himself, ‘Is it
-possible he should know what he is, and be that he is?’ Yet Parolles
-himself gives the best solution of the difficulty afterwards when he is
-thankful to escape with his life and the loss of character; for, so that
-he can live on, he is by no means squeamish about the loss of
-pretensions, to which he had sense enough to know he had no real claim,
-and which he had assumed only as a means to live.
-
- ‘_Parolles._ Yet I am thankful: if my heart were great,
- ‘Twould burst at this. Captain I’ll be no more,
- But I will eat and drink, and sleep as soft
- As captain shall. Simply the thing I am
- Shall make me live: who knows himself a braggart,
- Let him fear this; for it shall come to pass,
- That every braggart shall be found an ass.
- Rust sword, cool blushes, and Parolles live
- Safest in shame; being fool’d, by fool’ry thrive;
- There’s place and means for every man alive.
- I’ll after them.’
-
-The story of ALL’S WELL THAT ENDS WELL, and of several others of
-Shakespear’s plays, is taken from Boccacio. The poet has dramatised the
-original novel with great skill and comic spirit, and has preserved all
-the beauty of character and sentiment without _improving upon_ it, which
-was impossible. There is indeed in Boccacio’s serious pieces a truth, a
-pathos, and an exquisite refinement of sentiment, which is hardly to be
-met with in any other prose writer whatever. Justice has not been done
-him by the world. He has in general passed for a mere narrator of
-lascivious tales or idle jests. This character probably originated in
-his obnoxious attacks on the monks, and has been kept up by the
-grossness of mankind, who revenged their own want of refinement on
-Boccacio, and only saw in his writings what suited the coarseness of
-their own tastes. But the truth is, that he has carried sentiment of
-every kind to its very highest purity and perfection. By sentiment we
-would here understand the habitual workings of some one powerful
-feeling, where the heart reposes almost entirely upon itself, without
-the violent excitement of opposing duties or untoward circumstances. In
-this way, nothing ever came up to the story of Frederigo Alberigi and
-his Falcon. The perseverance in attachment, the spirit of gallantry and
-generosity displayed in it, has no parallel in the history of heroical
-sacrifices. The feeling is so unconscious too, and involuntary, is
-brought out in such small, unlooked-for, and unostentatious
-circumstances, as to show it to have been woven into the very nature and
-soul of the author. The story of Isabella is scarcely less fine, and is
-more affecting in the circumstances and in the catastrophe. Dryden has
-done justice to the impassioned eloquence of the Tancred and Sigismunda;
-but has not given an adequate idea of the wild preternatural interest of
-the story of Honoria. Cimon and Iphigene is by no means one of the best,
-notwithstanding the popularity of the subject. The proof of unalterable
-affection given in the story of Jeronymo, and the simple touches of
-nature and picturesque beauty in the story of the two holiday lovers,
-who were poisoned by tasting of a leaf in the garden at Florence, are
-perfect master-pieces. The epithet of Divine was well bestowed on this
-great painter of the human heart. The invention implied in his different
-tales is immense: but we are not to infer that it is all his own. He
-probably availed himself of all the common traditions which were
-floating in his time, and which he was the first to appropriate. Homer
-appears the most original of all authors—probably for no other reason
-than that we can trace the plagiarism no farther. Boccacio has furnished
-subjects to numberless writers since his time, both dramatic and
-narrative. The story of Griselda is borrowed from his Decameron by
-Chaucer; as is the Knight’s Tale (Palamon and Arcite) from his poem of
-the Theseid.
-
-
- LOVE’S LABOUR’S LOST
-
-If we were to part with any of the author’s comedies, it should be this.
-Yet we should be loth to part with Don Adriano de Armado, that mighty
-potentate of nonsense, or his page, that handful of wit; with Nathaniel
-the curate, or Holofernes the schoolmaster, and their dispute after
-dinner on ‘the golden cadences of poesy’; with Costard the clown, or
-Dull the constable. Biron is too accomplished a character to be lost to
-the world, and yet he could not appear without his fellow courtiers and
-the king: and if we were to leave out the ladies, the gentlemen would
-have no mistresses. So that we believe we may let the whole play stand
-as it is, and we shall hardly venture to ‘set a mark of reprobation on
-it.’ Still we have some objections to the style, which we think savours
-more of the pedantic spirit of Shakespear’s time than of his own genius;
-more of controversial divinity, and the logic of Peter Lombard, than of
-the inspiration of the Muse. It transports us quite as much to the
-manners of the court, and the quirks of courts of law, as to the scenes
-of nature or the fairy-land of his own imagination. Shakespear has set
-himself to imitate the tone of polite conversation then prevailing among
-the fair, the witty, and the learned, and he has imitated it but too
-faithfully. It is as if the hand of Titian had been employed to give
-grace to the curls of a full-bottomed periwig, or Raphael had attempted
-to give expression to the tapestry figures in the House of Lords.
-Shakespear has put an excellent description of this fashionable jargon
-into the mouth of the critical Holofernes ‘as too picked, too spruce,
-too affected, too odd, as it were, too peregrinate, as I may call it’;
-and nothing can be more marked than the difference when he breaks loose
-from the trammels he had imposed on himself, ‘as light as bird from
-brake,’ and speaks in his own person. We think, for instance, that in
-the following soliloquy the poet has fairly got the start of Queen
-Elizabeth and her maids of honour:—
-
- ‘_Biron._ O! and I forsooth in love,
- I that have been love’s whip;
- A very beadle to an amorous sigh:
- A critic; nay, a night-watch constable,
- A domineering pedant o’er the boy,
- Than whom no mortal more magnificent.
- This wimpled, whining, purblind, wayward boy,
- This signior Junio, giant dwarf, Dan Cupid,
- Regent of love-rhymes, lord of folded arms,
- Th’ anointed sovereign of sighs and groans:
- Liege of all loiterers and malecontents,
- Dread prince of plackets, king of codpieces,
- Sole imperator, and great general
- Of trotting parators (O my little heart!)
- And I to be a corporal of his field,
- And wear his colours like a tumbler’s hoop?
- What? I love! I sue! I seek a wife!
- A woman, that is like a German clock,
- Still a repairing; ever out of frame;
- And never going aright, being a watch,
- And being watch’d, that it may still go right?
- Nay, to be perjur’d, which is worst of all:
- And among three to love the worst of all,
- A whitely wanton with a velvet brow,
- With two pitch balls stuck in her face for eyes;
- Ay, and by heav’n, one that will do the deed,
- Though Argus were her eunuch and her guard;
- And I to sigh for her! to watch for her!
- To pray for her! Go to; it is a plague
- That Cupid will impose for my neglect
- Of his almighty dreadful little might.
- Well, I will love, write, sigh, pray, sue, and groan:
- Some men must love my lady, and some Joan.’
-
-The character of Biron drawn by Rosaline and that which Biron gives of
-Boyet are equally happy. The observations on the use and abuse of study,
-and on the power of beauty to quicken the understanding as well as the
-senses, are excellent. The scene which has the greatest dramatic effect
-is that in which Biron, the king, Longaville, and Dumain, successively
-detect each other and are detected in their breach of their vow and in
-their profession of attachment to their several mistresses, in which
-they suppose themselves to be overheard by no one. The reconciliation
-between these lovers and their sweethearts is also very good, and the
-penance which Rosaline imposes on Biron, before he can expect to gain
-her consent to marry him, full of propriety and beauty.
-
- ‘_Rosaline._ Oft have I heard of you, my lord Biron,
- Before I saw you: and the world’s large tongue
- Proclaims you for a man replete with mocks;
- Full of comparisons, and wounding flouts;
- Which you on all estates will execute,
- That lie within the mercy of your wit.
- To weed this wormwood from your faithful brain;
- And therewithal to win me, if you please,
- (Without the which I am not to be won)
- You shall this twelvemonth term from day to day
- Visit the speechless sick, and still converse
- With groaning wretches; and your task shall be,
- With all the fierce endeavour of your wit,
- T’ enforce the pained impotent to smile.
-
- _Biron._ To move wild laughter in the throat of death?
- It cannot be: it is impossible:
- Mirth cannot move a soul in agony.
-
- _Rosaline._ Why, that’s the way to choke a gibing spirit,
- Whose influence is begot of that loose grace,
- Which shallow laughing hearers give to fools:
- A jest’s prosperity lies in the ear
- Of him that hears it; never in the tongue
- Of him that makes it: then, if sickly ears,
- Deaf’d with the clamours of their own dear groans,
- Will hear your idle scorns, continue then,
- And I will have you, and that fault withal;
- But, if they will not, throw away that spirit,
- And I shall find you empty of that fault,
- Right joyful of your reformation.
-
- _Biron._ A twelvemonth? Well, befall what will befall,
- I’ll jest a twelvemonth in an hospital.’
-
-The famous cuckoo-song closes the play: but we shall add no more
-criticisms: ‘the words of Mercury are harsh after the songs of Apollo.’
-
-
- MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING
-
-This admirable comedy used to be frequently acted till of late years.
-Mr. Garrick’s Benedick was one of his most celebrated characters; and
-Mrs. Jordan, we have understood, played Beatrice very delightfully. The
-serious part is still the most prominent here, as in other instances
-that we have noticed. Hero is the principal figure in the piece, and
-leaves an indelible impression on the mind by her beauty, her
-tenderness, and the hard trial of her love. The passage in which Claudio
-first makes a confession of his affection towards her, conveys as
-pleasing an image of the entrance of love into a youthful bosom as can
-well be imagined.
-
- ‘Oh, my lord,
- When you went onward with this ended action,
- I look’d upon her with a soldier’s eye,
- That lik’d, but had a rougher task in hand
- Than to drive liking to the name of love;
- But now I am return’d, and that war-thoughts
- Have left their places vacant; in their rooms
- Come thronging soft and delicate desires,
- All prompting me how fair young Hero is,
- Saying, I lik’d her ere I went to wars.’
-
-In the scene at the altar, when Claudio, urged on by the villain Don
-John, brings the charge of incontinence against her, and as it were
-divorces her in the very marriage-ceremony, her appeals to her own
-conscious innocence and honour are made with the most affecting
-simplicity.
-
- ‘_Claudio._ No, Leonato,
- I never tempted her with word too large,
- But, as a brother to his sister, shew’d
- Bashful sincerity, and comely love.
-
- _Hero._ And seem’d I ever otherwise to you?
-
- _Claudio._ Out on thy seeming, I will write against it:
- You seem to me as Dian in her orb,
- As chaste as is the bud ere it be blown;
- But you are more intemperate in your blood
- Than Venus, or those pamper’d animals
- That rage in savage sensuality.
-
- _Hero._ Is my lord well, that he doth speak so wide?
-
- _Leonato._ Are these things spoken, or do I but dream?
-
- _John._ Sir, they are spoken, and these things are true.
-
- _Benedick._ This looks not like a nuptial.
-
- _Hero._ True! O God!’
-
-The justification of Hero in the end, and her restoration to the
-confidence and arms of her lover, is brought about by one of those
-temporary consignments to the grave of which Shakespear seems to have
-been fond. He has perhaps explained the theory of this predilection in
-the following lines:—
-
- ‘_Friar._ She dying, as it must be so maintain’d,
- Upon the instant that she was accus’d,
- Shall be lamented, pity’d, and excus’d,
- Of every hearer: for it so falls out,
- That what we have we prize not to the worth,
- While we enjoy it; but being lack’d and lost,
- Why then we rack the value; then we find
- The virtue, that possession would not shew us
- Whilst it was ours.—So will it fare with Claudio;
- When he shall hear she dy’d upon his words,
- The idea of her love shall sweetly creep
- Into his study of imagination;
- And every lovely organ of her life
- Shall come apparel’d in more precious habit,
- More moving, delicate, and full of life,
- Into the eye and prospect of his soul,
- Than when she liv’d indeed.’
-
-The principal comic characters in MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING, Benedick and
-Beatrice, are both essences in their kind. His character as a
-woman-hater is admirably supported, and his conversion to matrimony is
-no less happily effected by the pretended story of Beatrice’s love for
-him. It is hard to say which of the two scenes is the best, that of the
-trick which is thus practised on Benedick, or that in which Beatrice is
-prevailed on to take pity on him by overhearing her cousin and her maid
-declare (which they do on purpose) that he is dying of love for her.
-There is something delightfully picturesque in the manner in which
-Beatrice is described as coming to hear the plot which is contrived
-against herself—
-
- ‘For look where Beatrice, like a lapwing, runs
- Close by the ground, to hear our conference.’
-
-In consequence of what she hears (not a word of which is true) she
-exclaims when these good-natured informants are gone,
-
- ‘What fire is in mine ears? Can this be true?
- Stand I condemn’d for pride and scorn so much?
- Contempt, farewell! and maiden pride adieu!
- No glory lives behind the back of such.
- And, Benedick, love on, I will requite thee;
- Taming my wild heart to thy loving hand;
- If thou dost love, my kindness shall incite thee
- To bind our loves up in an holy band:
- For others say thou dost deserve; and I
- Believe it better than reportingly.’
-
-And Benedick, on his part, is equally sincere in his repentance with
-equal reason, after he has heard the grey-beard, Leonato, and his
-friend, ‘Monsieur Love,’ discourse of the desperate state of his
-supposed inamorata.
-
- ‘This can be no trick; the conference was sadly borne.—They have the
- truth of this from Hero. They seem to pity the lady; it seems her
- affections have the full bent. Love me! why, it must be requited. I
- hear how I am censur’d: they say, I will bear myself proudly, if I
- perceive the love come from her; they say too, that she will rather
- die than give any sign of affection.—I did never think to marry: I
- must not seem proud:—happy are they that hear their detractions, and
- can put them to mending. They say, the lady is fair; ’tis a truth, I
- can bear them witness: and virtuous;—’tis so, I cannot reprove it:
- and wise—but for loving me:—by my troth it is no addition to her
- wit;—nor no great argument of her folly, for I will be horribly in
- love with her.—I may chance to have some odd quirks and remnants of
- wit broken on me, because I have rail’d so long against marriage:
- but doth not the appetite alter? A man loves the meat in his youth,
- that he cannot endure in his age.—Shall quips, and sentences, and
- these paper bullets of the brain, awe a man from the career of his
- humour? No: the world must be peopled. When I said, I would die a
- bachelor, I did not think I should live till I were marry’d.—Here
- comes Beatrice: by this day, she’s a fair lady: I do spy some marks
- of love in her.
-
-The beauty of all this arises from the characters of the persons so
-entrapped. Benedick is a professed and staunch enemy to marriage, and
-gives very plausible reasons for the faith that is in him. And as to
-Beatrice, she persecutes him all day with her jests (so that he could
-hardly think of being troubled with them at night) she not only turns
-him but all other things into jest, and is proof against everything
-serious.
-
- ‘_Hero._ Disdain and scorn ride sparkling in her eyes,
- Misprising what they look on; and her wit
- Values itself so highly, that to her
- All matter else seems weak: she cannot love,
- Nor take no shape nor project of affection,
- She is so self-endeared.
-
- _Ursula._ Sure, I think so;
- And therefore, certainly, it were not good
- She knew his love, lest she make sport at it.
-
- _Hero._ Why, you speak truth: I never yet saw man,
- How wise, how noble, young, how rarely featur’d,
- But she would spell him backward: if fair-fac’d,
- She’d swear the gentleman should be her sister;
- If black, why, nature, drawing of an antick,
- Made a foul blot: if tall, a lance ill-headed;
- If low, an agate very vilely cut:
- If speaking, why, a vane blown with all winds;
- If silent, why, a block moved with none.
- So turns she every man the wrong side out;
- And never gives to truth and virtue that
- Which simpleness and merit purchaseth.’
-
-These were happy materials for Shakespear to work on, and he has made a
-happy use of them. Perhaps that middle point of comedy was never more
-nicely hit in which the ludicrous blends with the tender, and our
-follies, turning round against themselves in support of our affections,
-retain nothing but their humanity.
-
-Dogberry and Verges in this play are inimitable specimens of quaint
-blundering and misprisions of meaning; and are a standing record of that
-formal gravity of pretension and total want of common understanding,
-which Shakespear no doubt copied from real life, and which in the course
-of two hundred years appear to have ascended from the lowest to the
-highest offices in the state.
-
-
- AS YOU LIKE IT
-
-SHAKESPEAR has here converted the forest of Arden into another Arcadia,
-where they ‘fleet the time carelessly, as they did in the golden world.’
-It is the most ideal of any of this author’s plays. It is a pastoral
-drama, in which the interest arises more out of the sentiments and
-characters than out of the actions or situations. It is not what is
-done, but what is said, that claims our attention. Nursed in solitude,
-‘under the shade of melancholy boughs,’ the imagination grows soft and
-delicate, and the wit runs riot in idleness, like a spoiled child, that
-is never sent to school. Caprice and fancy reign and revel here, and
-stern necessity is banished to the court. The mild sentiments of
-humanity are strengthened with thought and leisure; the echo of the
-cares and noise of the world strikes upon the ear of those ‘who have
-felt them knowingly,’ softened by time and distance. ‘They hear the
-tumult, and are still.’ The very air of the place seems to breathe a
-spirit of philosophical poetry: to stir the thoughts, to touch the heart
-with pity, as the drowsy forest rustles to the sighing gale. Never was
-there such beautiful moralising, equally free from pedantry or
-petulance.
-
- ‘And this their life, exempt from public haunts,
- Finds tongues in trees, books in the running brooks,
- Sermons in stones, and good in every thing.’
-
-Jaques is the only purely contemplative character in Shakespear. He
-thinks, and does nothing. His whole occupation is to amuse his mind, and
-he is totally regardless of his body and his fortunes. He is the prince
-of philosophical idlers; his only passion is thought; he sets no value
-upon any thing but as it serves as food for reflection. He can ‘suck
-melancholy out of a song, as a weasel sucks eggs’; the motley fool, ‘who
-morals on the time,’ is the greatest prize he meets with in the forest.
-He resents Orlando’s passion for Rosalind as some disparagement of his
-own passion for abstract truth; and leaves the Duke, as soon as he is
-restored to his sovereignty, to seek his brother out who has quitted it,
-and turned hermit.
-
- —‘Out of these convertites
- There is much matter to be heard and learnt.’
-
-Within the sequestered and romantic glades of the forest of Arden, they
-find leisure to be good and wise, or to play the fool and fall in love.
-Rosalind’s character is made up of sportive gaiety and natural
-tenderness: her tongue runs the faster to conceal the pressure at her
-heart. She talks herself out of breath, only to get deeper in love. The
-coquetry with which she plays with her lover in the double character
-which she has to support is managed with the nicest address. How full of
-voluble, laughing grace is all her conversation with Orlando—
-
- —‘In heedless mazes running
- With wanton haste and giddy cunning.’
-
-How full of real fondness and pretended cruelty is her answer to him
-when he promises to love her ‘For ever and a day!’
-
- ‘Say a day without the ever: no, no, Orlando, men are April when
- they woo, December when they wed: maids are May when they are maids,
- but the sky changes when they are wives: I will be more jealous of
- thee than a Barbary cock-pigeon over his hen; more clamorous than a
- parrot against rain; more new-fangled than an ape; more giddy in my
- desires than a monkey; I will weep for nothing like Diana in the
- fountain, and I will do that when you are disposed to be merry; I
- will laugh like a hyen, and that when you are inclined to sleep.
-
- _Orlando._ But will my Rosalind do so?
-
- _Rosalind._ By my life she will do as I do.’
-
-The silent and retired character of Celia is a necessary relief to the
-provoking loquacity of Rosalind, nor can anything be better conceived or
-more beautifully described than the mutual affection between the two
-cousins:—
-
- —‘We still have slept together,
- Rose at an instant, learn’d, play’d, eat together,
- And wheresoe’r we went, like Juno’s swans,
- Still we went coupled and inseparable.’
-
-The unrequited love of Silvius for Phebe shews the perversity of this
-passion in the commonest scenes of life, and the rubs and stops which
-nature throws in its way, where fortune has placed none. Touchstone is
-not in love, but he will have a mistress as a subject for the exercise
-of his grotesque humour, and to shew his contempt for the passion, by
-his indifference about the person. He is a rare fellow. He is a mixture
-of the ancient cynic philosopher with the modern buffoon, and turns
-folly into wit, and wit into folly, just as the fit takes him. His
-courtship of Audrey not only throws a degree of ridicule on the state of
-wedlock itself, but he is equally an enemy to the prejudices of opinion
-in other respects. The lofty tone of enthusiasm, which the Duke and his
-companions in exile spread over the stillness and solitude of a country
-life, receives a pleasant shock from Touchstone’s sceptical
-determination of the question.
-
- ‘_Corin._ And how like you this shepherd’s life, Mr. Touchstone?
-
- _Clown._ Truly, shepherd, in respect of itself, it is a good life;
- but in respect that it is a shepherd’s life, it is naught. In
- respect that it is solitary, I like it very well; but in respect
- that it is private, it is a very vile life. Now in respect it is in
- the fields, it pleaseth me well; but in respect it is not in the
- court, it is tedious. As it is a spare life, look you, it fits my
- humour; but as there is no more plenty in it, it goes much against
- my stomach.’
-
-Zimmerman’s celebrated work on Solitude discovers only _half_ the sense
-of this passage.
-
-There is hardly any of Shakespear’s plays that contains a greater number
-of passages that have been quoted in books of extracts, or a greater
-number of phrases that have become in a manner proverbial. If we were to
-give all the striking passages, we should give half the play. We will
-only recall a few of the most delightful to the reader’s recollection.
-Such are the meeting between Orlando and Adam, the exquisite appeal of
-Orlando to the humanity of the Duke and his company to supply him with
-food for the old man, and their answer, the Duke’s description of a
-country life, and the account of Jaques moralising on the wounded deer,
-his meeting with Touchstone in the forest, his apology for his own
-melancholy and his satirical vein, and the well-known speech on the
-stages of human life, the old song of ‘Blow, blow, thou winter’s wind,’
-Rosalind’s description of the marks of a lover and of the progress of
-time with different persons, the picture of the snake wreathed round
-Oliver’s neck while the lioness watches her sleeping prey, and
-Touchstone’s lecture to the shepherd, his defence of cuckolds, and
-panegyric on the virtues of ‘an If.’—All of these are familiar to the
-reader: there is one passage of equal delicacy and beauty which may have
-escaped him, and with it we shall close our account of AS YOU LIKE IT.
-It is Phebe’s description of Ganimed at the end of the third act.
-
- ‘Think not I love him, tho’ I ask for him;
- ’Tis but a peevish boy, yet he talks well;—
- But what care I for words! yet words do well,
- When he that speaks them pleases those that hear:
- It is a pretty youth; not very pretty;
- But sure he’s proud, and yet his pride becomes him;
- He’ll make a proper man; the best thing in him
- Is his complexion; and faster than his tongue
- Did make offence, his eye did heal it up:
- He is not very tall, yet for his years he’s tall;
- His leg is but so so, and yet ’tis well;
- There was a pretty redness in his lip,
- A little riper, and more lusty red
- Than that mix’d in his cheek; ’twas just the difference
- Betwixt the constant red and mingled damask.
- There be some women, Silvius, had they mark’d him
- In parcels as I did, would have gone near
- To fall in love with him: but for my part
- I love him not, nor hate him not; and yet
- I have more cause to hate him than to love him;
- For what had he to do to chide at me?’
-
-
- THE TAMING OF THE SHREW
-
-THE TAMING OF THE SHREW is almost the only one of Shakespear’s comedies
-that has a regular plot, and downright moral. It is full of bustle,
-animation, and rapidity of action. It shews admirably how self-will is
-only to be got the better of by stronger will, and how one degree of
-ridiculous perversity is only to be driven out by another still greater.
-Petruchio is a madman in his senses; a very honest fellow, who hardly
-speaks a word of truth, and succeeds in all his tricks and impostures.
-He acts his assumed character to the life, with the most fantastical
-extravagance, with complete presence of mind, with untired animal
-spirits, and without a particle of ill humour from beginning to end.—The
-situation of poor Katherine, worn out by his incessant persecutions,
-becomes at last almost as pitiable as it is ludicrous, and it is
-difficult to say which to admire most, the unaccountableness of his
-actions, or the unalterableness of his resolutions. It is a character
-which most husbands ought to study, unless perhaps the very audacity of
-Petruchio’s attempt might alarm them more than his success would
-encourage them. What a sound must the following speech carry to some
-married ears!
-
- ‘Think you a little din can daunt my ears?
- Have I not in my time heard lions roar?
- Have I not heard the sea, puff’d up with winds,
- Rage like an angry boar, chafed with sweat?
- Have I not heard great ordnance in the field?
- And heav’n’s artillery thunder in the skies?
- Have I not in a pitched battle heard
- Loud larums, neighing steeds, and trumpets clang?
- And do you tell me of a woman’s tongue,
- That gives not half so great a blow to hear,
- As will a chesnut in a farmer’s fire?’
-
-Not all Petruchio’s rhetoric would persuade more than ‘some dozen
-followers’ to be of this heretical way of thinking. He unfolds his
-scheme for the _Taming of the Shrew_, on a principle of contradiction,
-thus:—
-
- ‘I’ll woo her with some spirit when she comes.
- Say that she rail, why then I’ll tell her plain
- She sings as sweetly as a nightingale;
- Say that she frown, I’ll say she looks as clear
- As morning roses newly wash’d with dew;
- Say she be mute, and will not speak a word,
- Then I’ll commend her volubility,
- And say she uttereth piercing eloquence:
- If she do bid me pack, I’ll give her thanks,
- As though she bid me stay by her a week;
- If she deny to wed, I’ll crave the day,
- When I shall ask the banns, and when be married?’
-
-He accordingly gains her consent to the match, by telling her father
-that he has got it; disappoints her by not returning at the time he has
-promised to wed her, and when he returns, creates no small consternation
-by the oddity of his dress and equipage. This, however, is nothing to
-the astonishment excited by his mad-brained behaviour at the marriage.
-Here is the account of it by an eye-witness:—
-
- ‘_Gremio._ Tut, she’s a lamb, a dove, a fool to him:
- I’ll tell you, Sir Lucentio; when the priest
- Should ask if Katherine should be his wife?
- Ay, by gogs woons, quoth he; and swore so loud,
- That, all amaz’d, the priest let fall the book;
- And as he stooped again to take it up,
- This mad-brain’d bridegroom took him such a cuff,
- That down fell priest and book, and book and priest.
- Now take them up, quoth he, if any list.
-
- _Tranio._ What said the wench when he rose up again?
-
- _Gremio._ Trembled and shook; for why, he stamp’d and swore,
- As if the vicar meant to cozen him.
- But after many ceremonies done,
- He calls for wine; a health, quoth he; as if
- He’ad been aboard carousing with his mates
- After a storm; quaft off the muscadel,
- And threw the sops all in the sexton’s face;
- Having no other cause but that his beard
- Grew thin and hungerly, and seem’d to ask
- His sops as he was drinking. This done, he took
- The bride about the neck, and kiss’d her lips
- With such a clamourous smack, that at their parting
- All the church echoed: and I seeing this,
- Came thence for very shame; and after me,
- I know, the rout is coming;—
- Such a mad marriage never was before.’
-
-The most striking and at the same time laughable feature in the
-character of Petruchio throughout, is the studied approximation to the
-intractable character of real madness, his apparent insensibility to all
-external considerations, and utter indifference to every thing but the
-wild and extravagant freaks of his own self-will. There is no contending
-with a person on whom nothing makes any impression but his own purposes,
-and who is bent on his own whims just in proportion as they seem to want
-common sense. With him a thing’s being plain and reasonable is a reason
-against it. The airs he gives himself are infinite, and his caprices as
-sudden as they are groundless. The whole of his treatment of his wife at
-home is in the same spirit of ironical attention and inverted gallantry.
-Every thing flies before his will, like a conjuror’s wand, and he only
-metamorphoses his wife’s temper by metamorphosing her senses and all the
-objects she sees, at a word’s speaking. Such are his insisting that it
-is the moon and not the sun which they see, etc. This extravagance
-reaches its most pleasant and poetical height in the scene where, on
-their return to her father’s, they meet old Vincentio, whom Petruchio
-immediately addresses as a young lady:—
-
- ‘_Petruchio._ Good morrow, gentle mistress, where away?
- Tell me, sweet Kate, and tell me truly too,
- Hast thou beheld a fresher gentlewoman?
- Such war of white and red within her cheeks;
- What stars do spangle heaven with such beauty,
- As those two eyes become that heav’nly face?
- Fair lovely maid, once more good day to thee:
- Sweet Kate, embrace her for her beauty’s sake.
-
- _Hortensio._ He’ll make the man mad to make a woman of him.
-
- _Katherine._ Young budding virgin, fair and fresh and sweet,
- Whither away, or where is thy abode?
- Happy the parents of so fair a child;
- Happier the man whom favourable stars
- Allot thee for his lovely bed-fellow.
-
- _Petruchio._ Why, how now, Kate, I hope thou art not mad:
- This is a man, old, wrinkled, faded, wither’d,
- And not a maiden, as thou say’st he is.
-
- _Katherine._ Pardon, old father, my mistaken eyes
- That have been so bedazed with the sun
- That everything I look on seemeth green.
- Now I perceive thou art a reverend father.’
-
-The whole is carried off with equal spirit, as if the poet’s comic Muse
-had wings of fire. It is strange how one man could be so many things;
-but so it is. The concluding scene, in which trial is made of the
-obedience of the new-married wives (so triumphantly for Petruchio) is a
-very happy one.—In some parts of this play there is a little too much
-about music-masters and masters of philosophy. They were things of
-greater rarity in those days than they are now. Nothing however can be
-better than the advice which Tranio gives his master for the prosecution
-of his studies:—
-
- ‘The mathematics, and the metaphysics,
- Fall to them as you find your stomach serves you:
- No profit grows, where is no pleasure ta’en:
- In brief, sir, study what you most affect.’
-
-We have heard the _Honey-Moon_ called ‘an elegant Katherine and
-Petruchio.’ We suspect we do not understand this word _elegant_ in the
-sense that many people do. But in our sense of the word, we should call
-Lucentio’s description of his mistress elegant.
-
- ‘Tranio, I saw her coral lips to move,
- And with her breath she did perfume the air:
- Sacred and sweet was all I saw in her.’
-
-When Biondello tells the same Lucentio for his encouragement, ‘I knew a
-wench married in an afternoon as she went to the garden for parsley to
-stuff a rabbit, and so may you, sir’—there is nothing elegant in this,
-and yet we hardly know which of the two passages is the best.
-
-THE TAMING OF THE SHREW is a play within a play. It is supposed to be a
-play acted for the benefit of Sly the tinker, who is made to believe
-himself a lord, when he wakes after a drunken brawl. The character of
-Sly and the remarks with which he accompanies the play are as good as
-the play itself. His answer when he is asked how he likes it,
-‘Indifferent well; ’tis a good piece of work, would ‘twere done,’ is in
-good keeping, as if he were thinking of his Saturday night’s job. Sly
-does not change his tastes with his new situation, but in the midst of
-splendour and luxury still calls out lustily and repeatedly ‘for a pot
-o’ the smallest ale.’ He is very slow in giving up his personal identity
-in his sudden advancement.—‘I am Christophero Sly, call not me honour
-nor lordship. I ne’er drank sack in my life: and if you give me any
-conserves, give me conserves of beef: ne’er ask me what raiment I’ll
-wear, for I have no more doublets than backs, no more stockings than
-legs, nor no more shoes than feet, nay, sometimes more feet than shoes,
-or such shoes as my toes look through the over-leather.—What, would you
-make me mad? Am not I Christophero Sly, old Sly’s son of Burton-heath,
-by birth a pedlar, by education a card-maker, by transmutation a
-bear-herd, and now by present profession a tinker? Ask Marian Hacket,
-the fat alewife of Wincot, if she know me not; if she say I am not
-fourteen-pence on the score for sheer ale, score me up for the lying’st
-knave in Christendom.’
-
-This is honest. ‘The Slies are no rogues,’ as he says of himself. We
-have a great predilection for this representative of the family; and
-what makes us like him the better is, that we take him to be of kin (not
-many degrees removed) to Sancho Panza.
-
-
- MEASURE FOR MEASURE
-
-This is a play as full of genius as it is of wisdom. Yet there is an
-original sin in the nature of the subject, which prevents us from taking
-a cordial interest in it. ‘The height of moral argument’ which the
-author has maintained in the intervals of passion or blended with the
-more powerful impulses of nature, is hardly surpassed in any of his
-plays. But there is in general a want of passion; the affections are at
-a stand; our sympathies are repulsed and defeated in all directions. The
-only passion which influences the story is that of Angelo; and yet he
-seems to have a much greater passion for hypocrisy than for his
-mistress. Neither are we greatly enamoured of Isabella’s rigid chastity,
-though she could not act otherwise than she did. We do not feel the same
-confidence in the virtue that is ‘sublimely good’ at another’s expense,
-as if it had been put to some less disinterested trial. As to the Duke,
-who makes a very imposing and mysterious stage-character, he is more
-absorbed in his own plots and gravity than anxious for the welfare of
-the state; more tenacious of his own character than attentive to the
-feelings and apprehensions of others. Claudio is the only person who
-feels naturally; and yet he is placed in circumstances of distress which
-almost preclude the wish for his deliverance. Mariana is also in love
-with Angelo, whom we hate. In this respect, there may be said to be a
-general system of cross-purposes between the feelings of the different
-characters and the sympathy of the reader or the audience. This
-principle of repugnance seems to have reached its height in the
-character of Master Barnardine, who not only sets at defiance the
-opinions of others, but has even thrown off all self-regard,—‘one that
-apprehends death no more dreadfully but as a drunken sleep; careless,
-reckless, and fearless of what’s past, present, and to come.’ He is a
-fine antithesis to the morality and the hypocrisy of the other
-characters of the play. Barnardine is Caliban transported from
-Prospero’s wizard island to the forests of Bohemia or the prisons of
-Vienna. He is the creature of bad habits as Caliban is of gross
-instincts. He has however a strong notion of the natural fitness of
-things, according to his own sensations—‘He has been drinking hard all
-night, and he will not be hanged that day’—and Shakespear has let him
-off at last. We do not understand why the philosophical German critic,
-Schlegel, should be so severe on those pleasant persons, Lucio, Pompey,
-and Master Froth, as to call them ‘wretches.’ They appear all mighty
-comfortable in their occupations, and determined to pursue them, ‘as the
-flesh and fortune should serve.’ A very good exposure of the want of
-self-knowledge and contempt for others, which is so common in the world,
-is put into the mouth of Abhorson, the jailor, when the Provost proposes
-to associate Pompey with him in his office—‘A bawd, sir? Fie upon him,
-he will discredit our mystery.’ And the same answer will serve in nine
-instances out of ten to the same kind of remark, ‘Go to, sir, you weigh
-equally; a feather will turn the scale.’ Shakespear was in one sense the
-least moral of all writers; for morality (commonly so called) is made up
-of antipathies; and his talent consisted in sympathy with human nature,
-in all its shapes, degrees, depressions, and elevations. The object of
-the pedantic moralist is to find out the bad in everything: his was to
-shew that ‘there is some soul of goodness in things evil.’ Even Master
-Barnardine is not left to the mercy of what others think of him; but
-when he comes in, speaks for himself, and pleads his own cause, as well
-as if counsel had been assigned him. In one sense, Shakespear was no
-moralist at all: in another, he was the greatest of all moralists. He
-was a moralist in the same sense in which nature is one. He taught what
-he had learnt from her. He shewed the greatest knowledge of humanity
-with the greatest fellow-feeling for it.
-
-One of the most dramatic passages in the present play is the interview
-between Claudio and his sister, when she comes to inform him of the
-conditions on which Angelo will spare his life.
-
- ‘_Claudio._ Let me know the point.
-
- _Isabella._ O, I do fear thee, Claudio: and I quake,
- Lest thou a feverous life should’st entertain,
- And six or seven winters more respect
- Than a perpetual honour. Dar’st thou die?
- The sense of death is most in apprehension;
- And the poor beetle, that we tread upon,
- In corporal sufferance finds a pang as great
- As when a giant dies.
-
- _Claudio._ Why give you me this shame?
- Think you I can a resolution fetch
- From flowery tenderness; if I must die,
- I will encounter darkness as a bride,
- And hug it in mine arms.
-
- _Isabella._ There spake my brother! there my father’s grave
- Did utter forth a voice! Yes, thou must die:
- Thou art too noble to conserve a life
- In base appliances. This outward-sainted deputy—
- Whose settled visage and deliberate word
- Nips youth i’ the head, and follies doth emmew,
- As faulcon doth the fowl—is yet a devil.
-
- _Claudio._ The princely Angelo?
-
- _Isabella._ Oh, ’tis the cunning livery of hell,
- The damned’st body to invest and cover
- In princely guards! Dost thou think, Claudio,
- If I would yield him my virginity,
- Thou might’st be freed?
-
- _Claudio._ Oh, heavens! it cannot be.
-
- _Isabella._ Yes, he would give it thee, for this rank offence,
- So to offend him still: this night’s the time
- That I should do what I abhor to name,
- Or else thou dy’st to-morrow.
-
- _Claudio._ Thou shalt not do’t.
-
- _Isabella._ Oh, were it but my life,
- I’d throw it down for your deliverance
- As frankly as a pin.
-
- _Claudio._ Thanks, dear Isabel.
-
- _Isabella._ Be ready, Claudio, for your death to-morrow.
-
- _Claudio._ Yes.—Has he affections in him,
- That thus can make him bite the law by the nose?
- When he would force it, sure it is no sin;
- Or of the deadly seven it is the least.
-
- _Isabella._ Which is the least?
-
- _Claudio._ If it were damnable, he, being so wise,
- Why would he for the momentary trick
- Be perdurably fin’d? Oh, Isabel!
-
- _Isabella._ What says my brother?
-
- _Claudio._ Death is a fearful thing.
-
- _Isabella._ And shamed life a hateful.
-
- _Claudio._ Aye, but to die, and go we know not where;
- To lie in cold obstruction, and to rot;
- This sensible warm motion to become
- A kneaded clod; and the delighted spirit
- To bathe in fiery floods, or to reside
- In thrilling regions of thick-ribbed ice;
- To be imprison’d in the viewless winds,
- And blown with restless violence round about
- The pendant world; or to be worse than worst
- Of those, that lawless and incertain thoughts
- Imagine howling!—’tis too horrible!
- The weariest and most loathed worldly life,
- That age, ache, penury, and imprisonment
- Can lay on nature, is a paradise
- To what we fear of death.
-
- _Isabella._ Alas! alas!
-
- _Claudio._ Sweet sister, let me live:
- What sin you do to save a brother’s life,
- Nature dispenses with the deed so far,
- That it becomes a virtue.’
-
-What adds to the dramatic beauty of this scene and the effect of
-Claudio’s passionate attachment to life is, that it immediately follows
-the Duke’s lecture to him, in the character of the Friar, recommending
-an absolute indifference to it.
-
- —‘Reason thus with life,—
- If I do lose thee, I do lose a thing,
- That none but fools would keep: a breath thou art,
- Servile to all the skyey influences
- That do this habitation, where thou keep’st,
- Hourly afflict; merely, thou art death’s fool;
- For him thou labour’st by thy flight to shun,
- And yet run’st toward him still: thou art not noble;
- For all the accommodations, that thou bear’st,
- Are nurs’d by baseness: thou art by no means valiant;
- For thou dost fear the soft and tender fork
- Of a poor worm: thy best of rest is sleep,
- And that thou oft provok’st; yet grossly fear’st
- Thy death, which is no more. Thou art not thyself;
- For thou exist’st on many a thousand grains
- That issue out of dust: happy thou art not;
- For what thou hast not, still thou striv’st to get;
- And what thou hast, forget’st: thou art not certain;
- For thy complexion shifts to strange effects,
- After the moon: if thou art rich, thou art poor;
- For, like an ass, whose back with ingots bows
- Thou bear’st thy heavy riches but a journey,
- And death unloads thee: friend thou hast none;
- For thy own bowels, which do call thee sire,
- The mere effusion of thy proper loins,
- Do curse the gout, serpigo, and the rheum,
- For ending thee no sooner; thou hast nor youth, nor age;
- But, as it were, an after-dinner’s sleep,
- Dreaming on both: for all thy blessed youth
- Becomes as aged, and doth beg the alms
- Of palsied eld; and when thou art old, and rich,
- Thou hast neither heat, affection, limb, nor beauty,
- To make thy riches pleasant. What’s yet in this,
- That bears the name of life? Yet in this life
- Lie hid more thousand deaths; yet death we fear,
- That makes these odds all even.’
-
-
- THE MERRY WIVES OF WINDSOR
-
-THE MERRY WIVES OF WINDSOR is no doubt a very amusing play, with a great
-deal of humour, character, and nature in it: but we should have liked it
-much better, if any one else had been the hero of it, instead of
-Falstaff. We could have been contented if Shakespear had not been
-‘commanded to shew the knight in love.’ Wits and philosophers, for the
-most part, do not shine in that character; and Sir John himself, by no
-means, comes off with flying colours. Many people complain of the
-degradation and insults to which Don Quixote is so frequently exposed in
-his various adventures. But what are the unconscious indignities which
-he suffers, compared with the sensible mortifications which Falstaff is
-made to bring upon himself? What are the blows and buffetings which the
-Don receives from the staves of the Yanguesian carriers or from Sancho
-Panza’s more hard-hearted hands, compared with the contamination of the
-buck-basket, the disguise of the fat woman of Brentford, and the horns
-of Herne the hunter, which are discovered on Sir John’s head? In reading
-the play, we indeed wish him well through all these discomfitures, but
-it would have been as well if he had not got into them. Falstaff in the
-MERRY WIVES OF WINDSOR is not the man he was in the two parts of _Henry
-IV._ His wit and eloquence have left him. Instead of making a butt of
-others, he is made a butt of by them. Neither is there a single particle
-of love in him to excuse his follies: he is merely a designing,
-bare-faced knave, and an unsuccessful one. The scene with Ford as Master
-Brook, and that with Simple, Slender’s man, who comes to ask after the
-Wise Woman, are almost the only ones in which his old intellectual
-ascendancy appears. He is like a person recalled to the stage to perform
-an unaccustomed and ungracious part; and in which we perceive only ‘some
-faint sparks of those flashes of merriment, that were wont to set the
-hearers in a roar.’ But the single scene with Doll Tearsheet, or Mrs.
-Quickly’s account of his desiring ‘to eat some of housewife Reach’s
-prawns,’ and telling her ‘to be no more so familiarity with such
-people,’ is worth the whole of the MERRY WIVES OF WINDSOR put together.
-Ford’s jealousy, which is the main spring of the comic incidents, is
-certainly very well managed. Page, on the contrary, appears to be
-somewhat uxorious in his disposition; and we have pretty plain
-indications of the effect of the characters of the husbands on the
-different degrees of fidelity in their wives. Mrs. Quickly makes a very
-lively go-between, both between Falstaff and his Dulcineas, and Anne
-Page and her lovers, and seems in the latter case so intent on her own
-interest as totally to overlook the intentions of her employers. Her
-master, Dr. Caius, the Frenchman, and her fellow-servant Jack Rugby, are
-very completely described. This last-mentioned person is rather quaintly
-commended by Mrs. Quickly as ‘an honest, willing, kind fellow, as ever
-servant shall come in house withal, and I warrant you, no tell-tale, nor
-no breed-bate; his worst fault is, that he is given to prayer; he is
-something peevish that way; but nobody but has his fault.’ The Welch
-Parson, Sir Hugh Evans (a title which in those days was given to the
-clergy) is an excellent character in all respects. He is as respectable
-as he is laughable. He has ‘very good discretions, and very odd
-humours.’ The duel-scene with Caius gives him an opportunity to shew his
-‘cholers and his tremblings of mind,’ his valour and his melancholy, in
-an irresistible manner. In the dialogue, which at his mother’s request
-he holds with his pupil, William Page, to shew his progress in learning,
-it is hard to say whether the simplicity of the master or the scholar is
-the greatest. Nym, Bardolph, and Pistol, are but the shadows of what
-they were; and Justice Shallow himself has little of his consequence
-left. But his cousin, Slender, makes up for the deficiency. He is a very
-potent piece of imbecility. In him the pretensions of the worthy
-Gloucestershire family are well kept up, and immortalised. He and his
-friend Sackerson and his book of songs and his love of Anne Page and his
-having nothing to say to her can never be forgotten. It is the only
-first-rate character in the play: but it is in that class. Shakespear is
-the only writer who was as great in describing weakness as strength.
-
-
- THE COMEDY OF ERRORS
-
-This comedy is taken very much from the Menæchmi of Plautus, and is not
-an improvement on it. Shakespear appears to have bestowed no great pains
-on it, and there are but a few passages which bear the decided stamp of
-his genius. He seems to have relied on his author, and on the interest
-arising out of the intricacy of the plot. The curiosity excited is
-certainly very considerable, though not of the most pleasing kind. We
-are teazed as with a riddle, which notwithstanding we try to solve. In
-reading the play, from the sameness of the names of the two Antipholises
-and the two Dromios, as well from their being constantly taken for each
-other by those who see them, it is difficult, without a painful effort
-of attention, to keep the characters distinct in the mind. And again, on
-the stage, either the complete similarity of their persons and dress
-must produce the same perplexity whenever they first enter, or the
-identity of appearance which the story supposes, will be destroyed. We
-still, however, having a clue to the difficulty, can tell which is
-which, merely from the practical contradictions which arise, as soon as
-the different parties begin to speak; and we are indemnified for the
-perplexity and blunders into which we are thrown by seeing others thrown
-into greater and almost inextricable ones.—This play (among other
-considerations) leads us not to feel much regret that Shakespear was not
-what is called a classical scholar. We do not think his _forte_ would
-ever have lain in imitating or improving on what others invented, so
-much as in inventing for himself, and perfecting what he invented,—not
-perhaps by the omission of faults, but by the addition of the highest
-excellencies. His own genius was strong enough to bear him up, and he
-soared longest and best on unborrowed plumes.—The only passage of a very
-Shakespearian cast in this comedy is the one in which the Abbess, with
-admirable characteristic artifice, makes Adriana confess her own
-misconduct in driving her husband mad.
-
- ‘_Abbess._ How long hath this possession held the man?
-
- _Adriana._ This week he hath been heavy, sour, sad,
- And much, much different from the man he was;
- But, till this afternoon, his passion
- Ne’er brake into extremity of rage.
-
- _Abbess._ Hath he not lost much wealth by wreck at sea?
- Bury’d some dear friend? Hath not else his eye
- Stray’d his affection in unlawful love?
- A sin prevailing much in youthful men,
- Who give their eyes the liberty of gazing.
- Which of these sorrows is he subject to?
-
- _Adriana._ To none of these, except it be the last:
- Namely, some love, that drew him oft from home.
-
- _Abbess._ You should for that have reprehended him.
-
- _Adriana._ Why, so I did.
-
- _Abbess._ But not rough enough.
-
- _Adriana._ As roughly as my modesty would let me.
-
- _Abbess._ Haply, in private.
-
- _Adriana._ And in assemblies too.
-
- _Abbess._ Aye, but not enough.
-
- _Adriana._ It was the copy of our conference:
- In bed, he slept not for my urging it;
- At board, he fed not for my urging it;
- Alone it was the subject of my theme;
- In company, I often glanc’d at it;
- Still did I tell him it was vile and bad.
-
- _Abbess._ And therefore came it that the man was mad:
- The venom’d clamours of a jealous woman
- Poison more deadly than a mad dog’s tooth.
- It seems, his sleeps were hinder’d by thy railing:
- And therefore comes it that his head is light.
- Thou say’st his meat was sauc’d with thy upbraidings:
- Unquiet meals make ill digestions,
- Therefore the raging fire of fever bred:
- And what’s a fever but a fit of madness?
- Thou say’st his sports were hinder’d by thy brawls:
- Sweet recreation barr’d, what doth ensue,
- But moody and dull melancholy,
- Kinsman to grim and comfortless despair;
- And, at her heels, a huge infectious troop
- Of pale distemperatures, and foes to life?
- In food, in sport, and life-preserving rest
- To be disturb’d, would mad or man or beast:
- The consequence is then, thy jealous fits
- Have scar’d thy husband from the use of wits.
-
- _Luciana._ She never reprehended him but mildly,
- When he demeaned himself rough, rude, and wildly.—
- Why bear you these rebukes, and answer not?
-
- _Adriana._ She did betray me to my own reproof.’
-
-Pinch the conjuror is also an excrescence not to be found in Plautus. He
-is indeed a very formidable anachronism.
-
- ‘They brought one Pinch, a hungry lean-fac’d villain,
- A meer anatomy, a mountebank,
- A thread-bare juggler and a fortune-teller;
- A needy, hollow-ey’d, sharp-looking wretch,
- A living dead man.’
-
-This is exactly like some of the Puritanical portraits to be met with in
-Hogarth.
-
-
- DOUBTFUL PLAYS OF SHAKESPEAR
-
-We shall give for the satisfaction of the reader what the celebrated
-German critic, Schlegel, says on this subject, and then add a very few
-remarks of our own.
-
- ‘All the editors, with the exception of Capell, are unanimous in
- rejecting _Titus Andronicus_ as unworthy of Shakespear, though they
- always allow it to be printed with the other pieces, as the
- scape-goat, as it were, of their abusive criticism. The correct
- method in such an investigation is first to examine into the
- external grounds, evidences, etc. and to weigh their worth; and then
- to adduce the internal reasons derived from the quality of the work.
- The critics of Shakespear follow a course directly the reverse of
- this; they set out with a preconceived opinion against a piece, and
- seek, in justification of this opinion, to render the historical
- grounds suspicious, and to set them aside. _Titus Andronicus_ is to
- be found in the first folio edition of Shakespear’s works, which it
- was known was conducted by Heminge and Condell, for many years his
- friends and fellow-managers of the same theatre. Is it possible to
- persuade ourselves that they would not have known if a piece in
- their repertory did or did not actually belong to Shakespear? And
- are we to lay to the charge of these honourable men a designed fraud
- in this single case, when we know that they did not shew themselves
- so very desirous of scraping everything together which went by the
- name of Shakespear, but, as it appears, merely gave those plays of
- which they had manuscripts in hand? Yet the following circumstance
- is still stronger: George Meres, a contemporary and admirer of
- Shakespear, mentions _Titus Andronicus_ in an enumeration of his
- works, in the year 1598. Meres was personally acquainted with the
- poet, and so very intimately, that the latter read over to him his
- Sonnets before they were printed. I cannot conceive that all the
- critical scepticism in the world would be sufficient to get over
- such a testimony.
-
- ‘This tragedy, it is true, is framed according to a false idea of
- the tragic, which by an accumulation of cruelties and enormities
- degenerates into the horrible, and yet leaves no deep impression
- behind: the story of Tereus and Philomela is heightened and
- overcharged under other names, and mixed up with the repast of
- Atreus and Thyestes, and many other incidents. In detail there is no
- want of beautiful lines, bold images, nay, even features which
- betray the peculiar conception of Shakespear. Among these we may
- reckon the joy of the treacherous Moor at the blackness and ugliness
- of his child begot in adultery; and in the compassion of Titus
- Andronicus, grown childish through grief, for a fly which had been
- struck dead, and his rage afterwards when he imagines he discovers
- in it his black enemy, we recognize the future poet of _Lear_. Are
- the critics afraid that Shakespear’s fame would be injured, were it
- established that in his early youth he ushered into the world a
- feeble and immature work? Was Rome the less the conqueror of the
- world because Remus could leap over its first walls? Let any one
- place himself in Shakespear’s situation at the commencement of his
- career. He found only a few indifferent models, and yet these met
- with the most favourable reception, because men are never difficult
- to please in the novelty of an art before their taste has become
- fastidious from choice and abundance. Must not this situation have
- had its influence on him before he learned to make higher demands on
- himself, and, by digging deeper in his own mind, discovered the
- richest veins of a noble metal? It is even highly probable that he
- must have made several failures before getting into the right path.
- Genius is in a certain sense infallible, and has nothing to learn;
- but art is to be learned, and must be acquired by practice and
- experience. In Shakespear’s acknowledged works we find hardly any
- traces of his apprenticeship, and yet an apprenticeship he certainly
- had. This every artist must have, and especially in a period where
- he has not before him the example of a school already formed. I
- consider it as extremely probable, that Shakespear began to write
- for the theatre at a much earlier period than the one which is
- generally stated, namely, not till after the year 1590. It appears
- that, as early as the year 1584, when only twenty years of age, he
- had left his paternal home and repaired to London. Can we imagine
- that such an active head would remain idle for six whole years
- without making any attempt to emerge by his talents from an
- uncongenial situation? That in the dedication of the poem of Venus
- and Adonis he calls it, ‘the first heir of his invention,’ proves
- nothing against the supposition. It was the first which he printed;
- he might have composed it at an earlier period; perhaps, also, he
- did not include theatrical labours, as they then possessed but
- little literary dignity. The earlier Shakespear began to compose for
- the theatre, the less are we enabled to consider the immaturity and
- imperfection of a work as a proof of its spuriousness in opposition
- to historical evidence, if we only find in it prominent features of
- his mind. Several of the works rejected as spurious, may still have
- been produced in the period betwixt _Titus Andronicus_, and the
- earliest of the acknowledged pieces.
-
- ‘At last, Steevens published seven pieces ascribed to Shakespear in
- two supplementary volumes. It is to be remarked, that they all
- appeared in print in Shakespear’s life-time, with his name prefixed
- at full length. They are the following:—
-
- ‘1. _Locrine._ The proofs of the genuineness of this piece are not
- altogether unambiguous; the grounds for doubt, on the other hand,
- are entitled to attention. However, this question is immediately
- connected with that respecting _Titus Andronicus_, and must be at
- the same time resolved in the affirmative or negative.
-
- ‘2. _Pericles, Prince of Tyre._ This piece was acknowledged by
- Dryden, but as a youthful work of Shakespear. It is most undoubtedly
- his, and it has been admitted into several of the late editions. The
- supposed imperfections originate in the circumstance, that
- Shakespear here handled a childish and extravagant romance of the
- old poet Gower, and was unwilling to drag the subject out of its
- proper sphere. Hence he even introduces Gower himself, and makes him
- deliver a prologue entirely in his antiquated language and
- versification. This power of assuming so foreign a manner is at
- least no proof of helplessness.
-
- ‘3. _The London Prodigal._ If we are not mistaken, Lessing
- pronounced this piece to be Shakespear’s, and wished to bring it on
- the German stage.
-
- ‘4. _The Puritan; or, the Widows of Watling Street._ One of my
- literary friends, intimately acquainted with Shakespear, was of
- opinion that the poet must have wished to write a play for once in
- the style of Ben Jonson, and that in this way we must account for
- the difference between the present piece and his usual manner. To
- follow out this idea however would lead to a very nice critical
- investigation.
-
- ‘5. _Thomas, Lord Cromwell._
-
- ‘6. _Sir John Oldcastle—First Part._
-
- ‘7. _A Yorkshire Tragedy._
-
- ‘The three last pieces are not only unquestionably Shakespear’s, but
- in my opinion they deserve to be classed among his best and maturest
- works.—Steevens admits at last, in some degree, that they are
- Shakespear’s, as well as the others, excepting _Locrine_, but he
- speaks of all of them with great contempt, as quite worthless
- productions. This condemnatory sentence is not however in the
- slightest degree convincing, nor is it supported by critical acumen.
- I should like to see how such a critic would, of his own natural
- suggestion, have decided on Shakespear’s acknowledged master-pieces,
- and what he would have thought of praising in them, had the public
- opinion not imposed on him the duty of admiration. _Thomas, Lord
- Cromwell_, and _Sir John Oldcastle_, are biographical dramas, and
- models in this species: the first is linked, from its subject, to
- _Henry the Eighth_, and the second to _Henry the Fifth_. The second
- part of _Oldcastle_ is wanting; I know not whether a copy of the old
- edition has been discovered in England, or whether it is lost. _The
- Yorkshire Tragedy_ is a tragedy in one act, a dramatised tale of
- murder: the tragical effect is overpowering, and it is extremely
- important to see how poetically Shakespear could handle such a
- subject.
-
- ‘There have been still farther ascribed to him:—1st. _The Merry
- Devil of Edmonton_, a comedy in one act, printed in Dodsley’s old
- plays. This has certainly some appearances in its favour. It
- contains a merry landlord, who bears a great similarity to the one
- in the _Merry Wives of Windsor_. However, at all events, though an
- ingenious, it is but a hasty sketch. 2d. _The Accusation of Paris._
- 3d. _The Birth of Merlin._ 4th. _Edward the Third._ 5th. _The Fair
- Emma._ 6th. _Mucedorus._ 7th. _Arden of Feversham._ I have never
- seen any of these, and cannot therefore say anything respecting
- them. From the passages cited, I am led to conjecture that the
- subject of _Mucedorus_ is the popular story of Valentine and Orson;
- a beautiful subject which Lope de Vega has also taken for a play.
- _Arden of Feversham_ is said to be a tragedy on the story of a man,
- from whom the poet was descended by the mother’s side. If the
- quality of the piece is not too directly at variance with this
- claim, the circumstance would afford an additional probability in
- its favour. For such motives were not foreign to Shakespear: he
- treated Henry the Seventh, who bestowed lands on his forefathers for
- services performed by them, with a visible partiality.
-
- ‘Whoever takes from Shakespear a play early ascribed to him, and
- confessedly belonging to his time, is unquestionably bound to
- answer, with some degree of probability, this question: who has then
- written it? Shakespear’s competitors in the dramatic walk are pretty
- well known, and if those of them who have even acquired a
- considerable name, a Lilly, a Marlow, a Heywood, are still so very
- far below him, we can hardly imagine that the author of a work,
- which rises so high beyond theirs, would have remained
- unknown.’—_Lectures on Dramatic Literature_, vol. ii. page 252.
-
-We agree to the truth of this last observation, but not to the justice
-of its application to some of the plays here mentioned. It is true that
-Shakespear’s best works are very superior to those of Marlow, or
-Heywood, but it is not true that the best of the doubtful plays above
-enumerated are superior or even equal to the best of theirs. _The
-Yorkshire Tragedy_, which Schlegel speaks of as an undoubted production
-of our author’s, is much more in the manner of Heywood than of
-Shakespear. The effect is indeed overpowering, but the mode of producing
-it is by no means poetical. The praise which Schlegel gives to _Thomas,
-Lord Cromwell_, and to _Sir John Oldcastle_, is altogether exaggerated.
-They are very indifferent compositions, which have not the slightest
-pretensions to rank with _Henry V._ or _Henry VIII._ We suspect that the
-German critic was not very well acquainted with the dramatic
-contemporaries of Shakespear, or aware of their general merits; and that
-he accordingly mistakes a resemblance in style and manner for an equal
-degree of excellence. Shakespear differed from the other writers of his
-age not in the mode of treating his subjects, but in the grace and power
-which he displayed in them. The reason assigned by a literary friend of
-Schlegel’s for supposing _The Puritan; or, the Widow of Watling Street_,
-to be Shakespear’s, viz. that it is in the style of Ben Jonson, that is
-to say, in a style just the reverse of his own, is not very satisfactory
-to a plain English understanding. _Locrine_, and _The London Prodigal_,
-if they were Shakespear’s at all, must have been among the sins of his
-youth. _Arden of Feversham_ contains several striking passages, but the
-passion which they express is rather that of a sanguine temperament than
-of a lofty imagination; and in this respect they approximate more nearly
-to the style of other writers of the time than to Shakespear’s. _Titus
-Andronicus_ is certainly as unlike Shakespear’s usual style as it is
-possible. It is an accumulation of vulgar physical horrors, in which the
-power exercised by the poet bears no proportion to the repugnance
-excited by the subject. The character of Aaron the Moor is the only
-thing which shews any originality of conception; and the scene in which
-he expresses his joy ‘at the blackness and ugliness of his child begot
-in adultery,’ the only one worthy of Shakespear. Even this is worthy of
-him only in the display of power, for it gives no pleasure. Shakespear
-managed these things differently. Nor do we think it a sufficient answer
-to say that this was an embryo or crude production of the author. In its
-kind it is full grown, and its features decided and overcharged. It is
-not like a first imperfect essay, but shews a confirmed habit, a
-systematic preference of violent effect to everything else. There are
-occasional detached images of great beauty and delicacy, but these were
-not beyond the powers of other writers then living. The circumstance
-which inclines us to reject the external evidence in favour of this play
-being Shakespear’s is, that the grammatical construction is constantly
-false and mixed up with vulgar abbreviations, a fault that never occurs
-in any of his genuine plays. A similar defect, and the halting measure
-of the verse are the chief objections to _Pericles of Tyre_, if we
-except the far-fetched and complicated absurdity of the story. The
-movement of the thoughts and passions has something in it not unlike
-Shakespear, and several of the descriptions are either the original
-hints of passages which Shakespear has ingrafted on his other plays, or
-are imitations of them by some contemporary poet. The most memorable
-idea in it is in Marina’s speech, where she compares the world to ‘a
-lasting storm, hurrying her from her friends.’
-
-
- POEMS AND SONNETS
-
-Our idolatry of Shakespear (not to say our admiration) ceases with his
-plays. In his other productions, he was a mere author, though not a
-common author. It was only by representing others, that he became
-himself. He could go out of himself, and express the soul of Cleopatra;
-but in his own person, he appeared to be always waiting for the
-prompter’s cue. In expressing the thoughts of others, he seemed
-inspired; in expressing his own, he was a mechanic. The licence of an
-assumed character was necessary to restore his genius to the privileges
-of nature, and to give him courage to break through the tyranny of
-fashion, the trammels of custom. In his plays, he was ‘as broad and
-casing as the general air’: in his poems, on the contrary, he appears to
-be ‘cooped, and cabined in’ by all the technicalities of art, by all the
-petty intricacies of thought and language, which poetry had learned from
-the controversial jargon of the schools, where words had been made a
-substitute for things. There was, if we mistake not, something of
-modesty, and a painful sense of personal propriety at the bottom of
-this. Shakespear’s imagination, by identifying itself with the strongest
-characters in the most trying circumstances, grappled at once with
-nature, and trampled the littleness of art under his feet: the rapid
-changes of situation, the wide range of the universe, gave him life and
-spirit, and afforded full scope to his genius; but returned into his
-closet again, and having assumed the badge of his profession, he could
-only labour in his vocation, and conform himself to existing models. The
-thoughts, the passions, the words which the poet’s pen, ‘glancing from
-heaven to earth, from earth to heaven,’ lent to others, shook off the
-fetters of pedantry and affectation; while his own thoughts and
-feelings, standing by themselves, were seized upon as lawful prey, and
-tortured to death according to the established rules and practice of the
-day. In a word, we do not like Shakespear’s poems, because we like his
-plays: the one, in all their excellencies, are just the reverse of the
-other. It has been the fashion of late to cry up our author’s poems, as
-equal to his plays: this is the desperate cant of modern criticism. We
-would ask, was there the slightest comparison between Shakespear, and
-either Chaucer or Spenser, as mere poets? Not any.—The two poems of
-Venus and Adonis and of Tarquin and Lucrece appear to us like a couple
-of ice-houses. They are about as hard, as glittering, and as cold. The
-author seems all the time to be thinking of his verses, and not of his
-subject,—not of what his characters would feel, but of what he shall
-say; and as it must happen in all such cases, he always puts into their
-mouths those things which they would be the last to think of, and which
-it shews the greatest ingenuity in him to find out. The whole is
-laboured, up-hill work. The poet is perpetually singling out the
-difficulties of the art to make an exhibition of his strength and skill
-in wrestling with them. He is making perpetual trials of them as if his
-mastery over them were doubted. The images, which are often striking,
-are generally applied to things which they are the least like: so that
-they do not blend with the poem, but seem stuck upon it, like splendid
-patch-work, or remain quite distinct from it, like detached substances,
-painted and varnished over. A beautiful thought is sure to be lost in an
-endless commentary upon it. The speakers are like persons who have both
-leisure and inclination to make riddles on their own situation, and to
-twist and turn every object or incident into acrostics and anagrams.
-Everything is spun out into allegory; and a digression is always
-preferred to the main story. Sentiment is built up upon plays of words;
-the hero or heroine feels, not from the impulse of passion, but from the
-force of dialectics. There is besides a strange attempt to substitute
-the language of painting for that of poetry, to make us _see_ their
-feelings in the faces of the persons; and again, consistently with this,
-in the description of the picture in Tarquin and Lucrece, those
-circumstances are chiefly insisted on, which it would be impossible to
-convey except by words. The invocation to opportunity in the Tarquin and
-Lucrece is full of thoughts and images, but at the same time it is
-overloaded by them. The concluding stanza expresses all our objections
-to this kind of poetry:—
-
- ‘Oh! idle words, servants to shallow fools;
- Unprofitable sounds, weak arbitrators;
- Busy yourselves in skill-contending schools;
- Debate when leisure serves with dull debaters;
- To trembling clients be their mediators:
- For me I force not argument a straw,
- Since that my case is past all help of law.’
-
-The description of the horse in Venus and Adonis has been particularly
-admired, and not without reason:—
-
- ‘Round hoof’d, short jointed, fetlocks shag and long,
- Broad breast, full eyes, small head, and nostril wide,
- High crest, short ears, strait legs, and passing strong,
- Thin mane, thick tail, broad buttock, tender hide,
- Look what a horse should have, he did not lack,
- Save a proud rider on so proud a back.’
-
-Now this inventory of perfections shews great knowledge of the horse;
-and is good matter-of-fact poetry. Let the reader but compare it with a
-speech in the _Midsummer Night’s Dream_ where Theseus describes his
-hounds—
-
- ‘And their heads are hung
- With ears that sweep away the morning dew’—
-
-and he will perceive at once what we mean by the difference between
-Shakespear’s own poetry, and that of his plays. We prefer the Passionate
-Pilgrim very much to the Lover’s Complaint. It has been doubted whether
-the latter poem is Shakespear’s.
-
-Of the Sonnets we do not well know what to say. The subject of them
-seems to be somewhat equivocal; but many of them are highly beautiful in
-themselves, and interesting as they relate to the state of the personal
-feelings of the author. The following are some of the most striking:—
-
-
- CONSTANCY
-
- ‘Let those who are in favour with their stars,
- Of public honour and proud titles boast,
- Whilst I, whom fortune of such triumph bars,
- Unlook’d for joy in that I honour most.
- Great princes’ favourites their fair leaves spread,
- But as the marigold in the sun’s eye;
- And in themselves their pride lies buried,
- For at a frown they in their glory die.
- The painful warrior famous’d for fight,
- After a thousand victories once foil’d,
- Is from the book of honour razed quite,
- And all the rest forgot for which he toil’d:
- Then happy I, that love and am belov’d,
- Where I may not remove, nor be remov’d.’
-
-
- LOVE’S CONSOLATION
-
- ‘When in disgrace with fortune and men’s eyes,
- I all alone beweep my out-cast state,
- And trouble deaf heaven with my bootless cries,
- And look upon myself, and curse my fate,
- Wishing me like to one more rich in hope,
- Featur’d like him, like him with friends possess’d,
- Desiring this man’s art, and that man’s scope,
- With what I most enjoy contented least:
- Yet in these thoughts myself almost despising,
- Haply I think on thee,—and then my state
- (Like to the lark at break of day arising
- From sullen earth) sings hymns at heaven’s gate;
- For thy sweet love remember’d, such wealth brings,
- That then I scorn to change my state with kings.’
-
-
- NOVELTY
-
- ‘My love is strengthen’d, though more weak in seeming
- I love not less, though less the show appear:
- That love is merchandis’d, whose rich esteeming
- The owner’s tongue doth publish everywhere.
- Our love was new, and then but in the spring,
- When I was wont to greet it with my lays:
- As Philomel in summer’s front doth sing,
- And stops his pipe in growth of riper days:
- Not that the summer is less pleasant now
- Than when her mournful hymns did hush the night,
- But that wild music burdens every bough,
- And sweets grown common lose their dear delight.
- Therefore, like her, I sometime hold my tongue,
- Because I would not dull you with my song.’
-
-
- LIFE’S DECAY
-
- ‘That time of year thou may’st in me behold
- When yellow leaves, or none, or few do hang
- Upon those boughs which shake against the cold,
- Bare ruin’d choirs, where late the sweet birds sang.
- In me thou seest the twilight of such day,
- As after sun-set fadeth in the west,
- Which by and by black night doth take away,
- Death’s second self, that seals up all in rest.
- In me thou seest the glowing of such fire,
- That on the ashes of his youth doth lie,
- As the death-bed whereon it must expire,
- Consum’d with that which it was nourish’d by.
- This thou perceiv’st, which makes thy love more strong,
- To love that well which thou must leave ere long.’
-
-In all these, as well as in many others, there is a mild tone of
-sentiment, deep, mellow, and sustained, very different from the
-crudeness of his earlier poems.
-
-
- End of THE CHARACTERS OF SHAKESPEAR’S PLAYS.
-
------
-
-Footnote 64:
-
- A few alterations and corrections have been inserted in the present
- edition.
-
- [Note by W. H. to Second Edition.]
-
-Footnote 65:
-
- See the passage, beginning—‘It is impossible you should see this, were
- they as prime as goats,’ etc.
-
-Footnote 66:
-
- ‘_Iago._ Ay, too gentle.
-
- _Othello._ Nay, that’s certain.’
-
-Footnote 67:
-
- In the account of her death, a friend has pointed out an instance of
- the poet’s exact observation of nature:—
-
- ‘There is a willow growing o’er a brook,
- That shews its hoary leaves i’ th’ glassy stream.’
-
- The inside of the leaves of the willow, next the water, is of a
- whitish colour, and the reflection would therefore be ‘hoary.’
-
-Footnote 68:
-
- See an article, called _Theatralia_, in the second volume of the
- _Reflector_, by Charles Lamb.
-
-Footnote 69:
-
- There is another instance of the same distinction in Hamlet and
- Ophelia. Hamlet’s pretended madness would make a very good real
- madness in any other author.
-
-Footnote 70:
-
- The river wanders at its own sweet will.—WORDSWORTH.
-
-Footnote 71:
-
- The lady, we here see, gives up the argument, but keeps her mind.
-
-
-
-
- A LETTER TO WILLIAM GIFFORD, ESQ.
-
-
- [The title-page of the original edition is as follows: _A Letter to
- William Gifford, Esq. From William Hazlitt, Esq. ‘Fit pugil, et
- medicum urget.’ London: Printed for John Miller, Burlington Arcade,
- Piccadilly. 1819. Price Three Shillings._ A so-called ‘second
- edition’ of 1820 consisted of the unsold copies with a fresh
- title-page: _London: Printed for Robert Stodart, 81 Strand. 1820._]
-
-
-
-
- A LETTER TO WILLIAM GIFFORD, ESQ.
-
-
-Sir,—You have an ugly trick of saying what is not true of any one you do
-not like; and it will be the object of this letter to cure you of it.
-You say what you please of others: it is time you were told what you
-are. In doing this, give me leave to borrow the familiarity of your
-style:—for the fidelity of the picture I shall be answerable.
-
-You are a little person, but a considerable cat’s-paw; and so far worthy
-of notice. Your clandestine connexion with persons high in office
-constantly influences your opinions, and alone gives importance to them.
-You are the _Government Critic_, a character nicely differing from that
-of a government spy—the invisible link, that connects literature with
-the police. It is your business to keep a strict eye over all writers
-who differ in opinion with his Majesty’s Ministers, and to measure their
-talents and attainments by the standard of their servility and meanness.
-For this office you are well qualified. Besides being the Editor of the
-Quarterly Review, you are also paymaster of the band of Gentlemen
-Pensioners; and when an author comes before you in the one capacity,
-with whom you are not acquainted in the other, you know how to deal with
-him. You have your cue beforehand. The distinction between truth and
-falsehood you make no account of: you mind only the distinction between
-Whig and Tory. Accustomed to the indulgence of your mercenary virulence
-and party-spite, you have lost all relish as well as capacity for the
-unperverted exercises of the understanding, and make up for the obvious
-want of ability by a bare-faced want of principle. The same set of
-thread-bare common-places, the same second-hand assortment of abusive
-nicknames, the same assumption of little magisterial airs of
-superiority, are regularly repeated; and the ready convenient lie comes
-in aid of the dearth of other resources, and passes off, with impunity,
-in the garb of religion and loyalty. If no one finds it out, why then
-there is no harm done, _snug’s the word_; or if it should be detected,
-it is a good joke, shews spirit and invention in proportion to its
-grossness and impudence, and it is only a pity that what was so well
-meant in so good a cause, should miscarry! The end sanctifies the means;
-and you keep no faith with heretics in religion or government. You are
-under the protection of the _Court_; and your zeal for your king and
-country entitles you to say what you chuse of every public writer who
-does not do all in his power to pamper the one into a tyrant, and to
-trample the other into a herd of slaves. You derive your weight with the
-great and powerful from the very circumstance that takes away all real
-weight from your authority, _viz._ that it is avowedly, and upon every
-occasion, exerted for no one purpose but to hold up to hatred and
-contempt whatever opposes in the slightest degree and in the most
-flagrant instances of abuse their pride and passions. You dictate your
-opinions to a party, because not one of your opinions is formed upon an
-honest conviction of the truth or justice of the case, but by collusion
-with the prejudices, caprice, interest or vanity of your employers. The
-mob of well-dressed readers who consult the Quarterly Review, know that
-_there is no offence in it_. They put faith in it because they are aware
-that it is ‘false and hollow, but will please the ear’; that it will
-tell them nothing but what they would wish to believe. Your reasoning
-comes under the head of Court-news; your taste is a standard of the
-prevailing _ton_ in certain circles, like Ackerman’s dresses for May.
-When you damn an author, one knows that he is not a favourite at Carlton
-House. When you say that an author cannot write common sense or English,
-you mean that he does not believe in the doctrine of _divine right_. Of
-course, the clergy and gentry will not read such an author. Your praise
-or blame has nothing to do with the merits of a work, but with the party
-to which the writer belongs, or is in the inverse _ratio_ of its merits.
-The dingy cover that wraps the pages of the Quarterly Review does not
-contain a concentrated essence of taste and knowledge, but is a
-receptacle for the scum and sediment of all the prejudice, bigotry,
-ill-will, ignorance, and rancour, afloat in the kingdom. This the fools
-and knaves who pin their faith on you know, and it is on this account
-they pin their faith on you. They come to you for a scale not of
-literary talent but of political subserviency. They want you to set your
-mark of approbation on a writer as a thorough-paced tool, or of
-reprobation as an honest man. Your fashionable readers, Sir, are
-hypocrites as well as knaves and fools; and the watch-word, the
-practical intelligence they want, must be conveyed to them without
-implied offence to their candour and liberality, in the _patois_ and
-gibberish of fraud of which you are a master. When you begin to jabber
-about common sense and English, they know what to be at, shut up the
-book, and wonder that any respectable publisher can be found to let it
-lie on his counter, as much as if it were a Petition for Reform. Do you
-suppose, Sir, that such persons as the Rev. Gerard Valerian Wellesley
-and the Rev. Weeden Butler would not be glad to ruin what they call a
-Jacobin author as well as a Jacobin stationer?[72] Or that they will not
-thank you for persuading them that their doing so in the former case is
-a proof of their taste and good sense, as well as loyalty and religion?
-You know very well that if a particle of truth or fairness were to find
-its way into a single number of your publication, another Quarterly
-Review would be set up to-morrow for the express purpose of depriving
-every author, in prose or verse, of his reputation and livelihood, who
-is not a regular hack of the vilest cabal that ever disgraced this or
-any other country.
-
-There is something in your nature and habits that fits you for the
-situation into which your good fortune has thrown you. In the first
-place, you are in no danger of exciting the jealousy of your patrons by
-a mortifying display of extraordinary talents, while your sordid
-devotion to their will and to your own interest at once ensures their
-gratitude and contempt. To crawl and lick the dust is all they expect of
-you, and all you can do. Otherwise they might fear your power, for they
-could have no dependence on your fidelity: but they take you with safety
-and fondness to their bosoms; for they know that if you cease to be a
-tool, you cease to be anything. If you had an exuberance of wit, the
-unguarded use of it might sometimes glance at your employers; if you
-were sincere yourself, you might respect the motives of others; if you
-had sufficient understanding, you might attempt an argument, and fail in
-it. But luckily for yourself and your admirers, you are but the dull
-echo, ‘the tenth transmitter’ of some hackneyed jest: the want of all
-manly and candid feeling in yourself only excites your suspicion and
-antipathy to it in others, as something at which your nature recoils:
-your slowness to understand makes you quick to misrepresent; and you
-infallibly make nonsense of what you cannot possibly conceive. What seem
-your wilful blunders are often the felicity of natural parts, and your
-want of penetration has all the appearance of an affected petulance!
-
-Again, of an humble origin yourself, you recommend your performances to
-persons of fashion by always abusing _low people_, with the smartness of
-a lady’s waiting woman, and the independent spirit of a travelling
-tutor. Raised from the lowest rank to your present despicable eminence
-in the world of letters, you are indignant that any one should attempt
-to rise into notice, except by the same regular trammels and servile
-gradations, or should go about to separate the stamp of merit from the
-badge of sycophancy. The silent listener in select circles, and menial
-tool of noble families, you have become the oracle of Church and State.
-The purveyor to the prejudices or passions of a private patron succeeds,
-by no other title, to regulate the public taste. You have felt the
-inconveniences of poverty, and look up with base and groveling
-admiration to the advantages of wealth and power: you have had to
-contend with the mechanical difficulties of a want of education, and you
-see nothing in learning but its mechanical uses. A self-taught man
-naturally becomes a pedant, and mistakes the means of knowledge for the
-end, unless he is a man of genius; and you, Sir, are not a man of
-genius. From having known nothing originally, you think it a great
-acquisition to know anything now, no matter what or how small it is—nay,
-the smaller and more insignificant it is, the more curious you seem to
-think it, as it is farther removed from common sense and human nature.
-The collating of points and commas is the highest game your literary
-ambition can reach to, and the squabbles of editors are to you
-infinitely more important than the meaning of an author. You think more
-of the letter than the spirit of a passage; and in your eagerness to
-show your minute superiority over those who have gone before you,
-generally miss both. In comparing yourself with others, you make a
-considerable mistake. You suppose the common advantages of a liberal
-education to be something peculiar to yourself, and calculate your
-progress beyond the rest of the world from the obscure point at which
-you first set out. Yet your overweening self-complacency is never easy
-but in the expression of your contempt for others; like a conceited
-mechanic in a village ale-house, you would set down every one who
-differs from you as an ignorant blockhead; and very fairly infer that
-any one who is beneath yourself must be nothing. You have been well
-called an Ultra-Crepidarian critic. From the difficulty you yourself
-have in constructing a sentence of common grammar, and your frequent
-failures, you instinctively presume that no author who comes under the
-lash of your pen can understand his mother-tongue: and again, you
-suspect every one who is not your ‘very good friend’ of knowing nothing
-of the Greek or Latin, because you are surprised to think how you came
-by your own knowledge of them. There is an innate littleness and
-vulgarity in all you do. In combating an opinion, you never take a broad
-and liberal ground, state it fairly, allow what there is of truth or an
-appearance of truth, and then assert your own judgment by exposing what
-is deficient in it, and giving a more masterly view of the subject. No:
-this would be committing your powers and pretensions where you dare not
-trust them. You know yourself better. You deny the meaning altogether,
-misquote or misapply, and then plume yourself on your own superiority to
-the absurdity you have created. Your triumph over your antagonists is
-the triumph of your cunning and mean-spiritedness over some nonentity of
-your own making; and your wary self-knowledge shrinks from a comparison
-with any but the most puny pretensions, as the spider retreats from the
-caterpillar into its web.
-
-There cannot be a greater nuisance than a dull, envious, pragmatical,
-low-bred man, who is placed as you are in the situation of the Editor of
-such a work as the Quarterly Review. Conscious that his reputation
-stands on very slender and narrow grounds, he is naturally jealous of
-that of others. He insults over unsuccessful authors; he hates
-successful ones. He is angry at the faults of a work; more angry at its
-excellences. If an opinion is old, he treats it with supercilious
-indifference; if it is new, it provokes his rage. Everything beyond his
-limited range of inquiry, appears to him a paradox and an absurdity: and
-he resents every suggestion of the kind as an imposition on the public,
-and an imputation on his own sagacity. He cavils at what he does not
-comprehend, and misrepresents what he knows to be true. Bound to go
-through the nauseous task of abusing all those who are not like himself
-the abject tools of power, his irritation increases with the number of
-obstacles he encounters, and the number of sacrifices he is obliged to
-make of common sense and decency to his interest and self-conceit. Every
-instance of prevarication he wilfully commits makes him more in love
-with hypocrisy, and every indulgence of his hired malignity makes him
-more disposed to repeat the insult and the injury. His understanding
-becomes daily more distorted, and his feelings more and more callous.
-Grown old in the service of corruption, he drivels on to the last with
-prostituted impotence and shameless effrontery; salves a meagre
-reputation for wit, by venting the driblets of his spleen and
-impertinence on others; answers their arguments by confuting himself;
-mistakes habitual obtuseness of intellect for a particular acuteness,
-not to be imposed upon by shallow appearances; unprincipled rancour for
-zealous loyalty; and the irritable, discontented, vindictive, peevish
-effusions of bodily pain and mental imbecility for proofs of refinement
-of taste and strength of understanding.
-
-Such, Sir, is the picture of which you have sat for the outline:—all
-that remains is to fill up the little, mean, crooked, dirty details. The
-task is to me no very pleasant one; for I can feel very little ambition
-to follow you through your ordinary routine of pettifogging objections
-and barefaced assertions, the only difficulty of making which is to
-throw aside all regard to truth and decency, and the only difficulty in
-answering them is to overcome one’s contempt for the writer. But you are
-a nuisance, and should be abated.
-
-I shall proceed to shew, first, your want of common honesty, in speaking
-of particular persons; and, secondly, your want of common capacity, in
-treating of any general question. It is this double negation of
-understanding and principle that makes you all that you are.—As an
-instance of the summary manner in which you dispose of any author who is
-not to your taste, you began your account of the first work of mine you
-thought proper to notice (the Round Table), with a paltry and deliberate
-falsehood. I need not be at much pains to shew that your opinion on the
-merits of a work is not of much value, after I have shewn that your word
-is not to be taken with respect to the author. The charges which you
-brought against me as the writer of that work, were chiefly these
-four:—1st, That I pretended to have written a work in the manner of the
-Spectator; I answer, this is a falsehood. The Advertisement to that work
-is written expressly to disclaim any such idea, and to apologise for the
-work’s having fallen short of the original intention of the projector
-(Mr. Leigh Hunt), from its execution having devolved almost entirely
-upon me, who had undertaken merely to furnish a set of essays and
-criticisms, which essays and criticisms were here collected together.—2.
-That I was not only a professed imitator of Addison, but a great coiner
-of new words and phrases: I answer, this is also a deliberate and
-contemptible falsehood. You have filled a paragraph with a catalogue of
-these new words and phrases, which you attribute to me, and single out
-as the particular characteristics of my style, not any one of which I
-have used. This you knew.—3. You say I write eternally about
-washerwomen. I answer, no such thing. There is indeed one paper in the
-Round Table on this subject, and I think a very agreeable one. I may say
-so, for it is not my writing.—4. You say that ‘I praise my own
-chivalrous eloquence’: and I answer, that’s a falsehood; and that you
-knew that I had not applied these words to myself, because you knew that
-it was not I who had used them. The last paragraph of the article in
-question is true: for as if to obviate the detection of this tissue of
-little, lying, loyal, catchpenny frauds, it contains a cunning, tacit
-acknowledgment of them; but says, with equal candour and modesty, that
-it is not the business of the writer to distinguish (in such trifling
-cases) between truth and falsehood. That may be; but I cannot think that
-for the editor of the Quarterly Review to want common veracity, is any
-disgrace to me. It is necessary, Sir, to go into the details of this
-fraudulent transaction, this Albemarle-street hoax, that the public may
-know, once for all, what to think of you and me. The first paragraph of
-the Review is couched in the following terms.
-
-‘Whatever may have been the preponderating feelings with which we closed
-these volumes, we will not refuse our acknowledgments to Mr. Hazlitt for
-a few mirthful sensations,’ (that they were very few, I can easily
-believe,) ‘which he has enabled us to mingle with the rest, by the hint
-that his Essays were meant to be “in the manner of the Spectator and
-Tatler.” The passage in which this is conveyed, happened to be nearly
-the last to which we turned; and we were about to rise from the Round
-Table, heavily oppressed with a recollection of vulgar descriptions,
-silly paradoxes, flat truisms, misty sophistry, broken English, ill
-humour, and rancorous abuse, when we were first informed of the modest
-pretensions of our host. Our thoughts then reverted with an eager
-impulse to the urbanity of Addison, his unassuming tone, and clear
-simplicity; to the ease and softness of his style, to the chearful
-benevolence of his heart. The playful gaiety too, and the tender
-feelings of his coadjutor, poor Steele, came forcibly to our memory. The
-effect of the ludicrous contrast thus presented to us, it would be
-somewhat difficult to describe. We think that it was akin to what we
-have felt from the admirable _nonchalance_ with which Liston, in the
-complex character of a weaver and an ass, seems to throw away all doubt
-of his being the most accomplished lover in the universe, and receives,
-as if they were merely his due, the caresses of the fairy
-queen.’—Quarterly Review, No. xxxiii. p. 154.
-
-The advertisement prefixed to the Round Table, in which the hint is
-conveyed which afforded you ‘a few mirthful sensations,’ stood thus.—
-
-‘The following work falls somewhat short of its title and original
-intention. It was proposed by my friend Mr. Hunt, to publish a series of
-papers in the Examiner, in the manner of the early periodical essayists,
-the Spectator and Tatler. These papers were to be contributed by various
-persons on a variety of subjects; and Mr. Hunt, as the editor, was to
-take the characteristic or dramatic part of the work upon himself. I
-undertook to furnish occasional essays and criticisms; one or two other
-friends promised their assistance; but the essence of the work was to be
-miscellaneous. The next thing was to fix upon a title for it. After much
-doubtful consultation, that of THE ROUND TABLE was agreed upon, as most
-descriptive of its nature and design. But our plan had been no sooner
-arranged and entered upon, than Buonaparte landed at Frejus, _et voila
-la Table Ronde dissoute_. Our little Congress was broken up as well as
-the great one. Politics called off the attention of the Editor from the
-belles lettres; and the task of continuing the work fell chiefly upon
-the person who was least able to give life and spirit to the original
-design. A want of variety in the subjects, and mode of treating them,
-is, perhaps, the least disadvantage resulting from this circumstance.
-All the papers in the two volumes here offered to the public, were
-written by myself and Mr. Hunt, except a letter communicated by a friend
-in the sixteenth number. Out of the fifty-two numbers, twelve are Mr.
-Hunt’s, with the signatures L. H. or H. T. For all the rest I am
-answerable. W. HAZLITT.’
-
-Such, Sir, is the passage to which you allude, with so much hysterical
-satisfaction, as having let you into the secret that I fancied myself to
-have produced a work ‘in the manner of the Spectator and Tatler’; and as
-having relieved you from the extreme uneasiness you had felt in reading
-through the ‘vulgar descriptions, silly paradoxes, flat truisms, misty
-sophistry, broken English, ill humour, and rancorous abuse,’ contained
-in the Round Table. If I had indeed given myself out for a second Steele
-or Addison, I should have made a very ludicrous mistake. As it is, it is
-you have made a wilful misstatement. Your oppression, Sir, in rising
-from the Round Table, must have been great to put you upon so desperate
-an expedient to divert your chagrin, as that of affecting to suppose
-that I had said just the contrary of what I did say, in order that you
-might affect ‘a few mirthful sensations’ at my expence. I cannot say
-that I envy you the little voluntary revulsion which your feelings
-underwent, at the ludicrous comparison which you fancy me to make
-between myself and Addison, on purpose to indulge the suggestions of
-your spleen and prejudice. These are among the last refinements, the
-_menus plaisirs_ of hypocrisy, of which I must remain in ignorance. I
-will not require you to retract the assertion you have made, but I will
-take care before I have done, that any assertion you may make with
-respect to me shall not be taken as current. As to your praise of the
-Tatler and Spectator, I must at all times agree to it: but as far as it
-was meant as a tacit reproof to my vanity in comparing myself with these
-authors, it appears to have been unnecessary. You say elsewhere,
-speaking of some passage of mine—‘Addison never wrote anything so
-fine!’—and again that I fancy myself a finer writer than Addison. By
-your uneasy jealousy of the self-conceit of other people, it should seem
-that you are in the habit of drawing comparisons, ‘secret, sweet, and
-precious,’ between yourself and your ‘illustrious predecessors’ not much
-to their advantage. As you have here thought proper to tell me what I do
-not think, I will tell you what I do think, which is, that you could not
-have written the passage in question, _On the Progress of Arts_, because
-you never felt half the enthusiasm for what is fine.
-
-2. After stating the pretensions of the work, you proceed to the style
-in which it is written.—‘There is one merit which this author possesses
-besides that of successful imitation—he is a very eminent creator of
-words and phrases. Amongst a vast variety which have newly started up we
-notice “firesider”—“kitcheny”—“to smooth up”—“to do off”—and “to tiptoe
-down.” To _this_ we add a few of the author’s new-born phrases, which
-bear sufficient marks of a kindred origin to entitle them to a place by
-_their_ side. Such is the assertion that Spenser “was dipt in poetic
-luxury”; the description of “a minute coil which clicks in the baking
-coal”—of “a numerousness scattering an individual gusto”—and of “curls
-that are ripe with sun shine.” _Our readers are perhaps by this time as
-much acquainted with the style of this author as they have any desire to
-be_,’ etc.
-
-I have nothing to do at present with the merits of the words or phrases,
-which you here attribute to me, and make the test of my general style,
-as if your readers truly if they persisted would find only a constant
-repetition of them in my writings. I say that they are not mine at all;
-that they are not characteristic of my style, that you knew this
-perfectly, and also that there were reasons which prevented me from
-pointing out this petty piece of chicanery; and farther, I say that I am
-so far from being ‘a very eminent creator of words and phrases,’ that I
-do not believe you can refer to an instance in anything I have written
-in which there is a single new word or phrase. In fact, I am as
-tenacious on this score of never employing any new words to express my
-ideas, as you, Sir, are of never expressing any ideas that are not
-perfectly thread-bare and commonplace. My style is as old as your
-matter. This is the fault you at other times find with it, mistaking the
-common idiom of the language for ‘broken English.’
-
-3. You say that ‘I write eternally about washerwomen’; and pray, if I
-did, what is that to you, Sir? There is a littleness in your objections
-which makes even the answers to them ridiculous, and which would make it
-impossible to notice them, were you not the Government-Critic. You say
-yourself indeed afterwards that ‘It is he’ (Mr. Hunt) ‘who devotes _ten
-or twelve pages_ to a dissertation on washerwomen.’ Good: what you say
-on this subject is a fair specimen of your mind and manners. The playing
-at fast-and-loose with the matter-of-fact may be passed over as a matter
-of course in your hypercritical lucubrations. There is but one half
-paper on this interdicted subject in the Round Table:—you have filled
-one page out of five of the article in the Review with a ridicule of
-this paper on account of the vulgarity of the subject, which offends you
-exceedingly; you recur to it twice afterwards _en passant_, and end your
-performance (somewhat in the style of a quack-doctor aping his own
-merry-andrew) with ‘two or three conclusive digs in the side at it.’
-There is something in the subject that makes a strong impression on your
-mind. You seem ‘to hate it with a perfect hatred.’[73] Now I would ask
-where is the harm of this dissertation on washerwomen inserted in the
-Round Table, any more than those of Dutch and Flemish kitchen-pieces,
-the glossy brilliancy and high finishing of which must have become
-familiar to your eye in the collections of Earl Grosvenor, Lord
-Mulgrave, and the Marquis of Stafford? What has Mr. Hunt done in this
-never-to-be forgiven paper to betray the lowness of his breeding or
-sentiments, or to shew that he who wrote it is ‘the droll or merry
-fellow of the piece,’ and that I who _did not write it_ am ‘a sour
-Jacobin, who hate everything but washerwomen’? Would Addison or Steele,
-‘poor Steele’ as you call him, have brought this as a capital charge
-against their ‘imitators’? Did they instinctively direct their
-speculations or limit their views of human life to ‘remarks on gentlemen
-and gentlewomen’? They often enough treated of low people and familiar
-life without any consciousness of degradation. ‘Their gorge did not
-rise’ at the humble worth or homely enjoyments of their
-fellow-creatures, like your’s. A coronet or a mitre were not the only
-things that caught their jaundiced eye, or soothed their rising gall.
-They who are always talking of high and low people are generally of a
-vulgar origin themselves, and of an inherent meanness of disposition
-which nothing can overcome. Besides, there is a want of good faith, as
-well as of good taste, in your affected fastidiousness on this point.
-‘You assume a vice, though you have it not,’ or not to the degree, which
-your petulance and servility would have us suppose. A short time before
-you wrote this uncalled-for tirade against Mr. Hunt as an exclusive
-patroniser of that class of females, ycleped ‘washerwomen,’ he had
-quoted with praise in the Examiner, and as a mark of tender and humane
-feelings in the author, in spite of appearances to the contrary, the
-following epitaph from the Gentleman’s Magazine.
-
- ‘EPITAPH BY WILLIAM GIFFORD, ESQ.
-
-‘We are no friends, publicly speaking, to the author of the following
-epitaph. We differ much with his politics, and with the cast of his
-satire; and do not think him, properly speaking, a poet, as many do. But
-we always admired the spirit that looked forth from his account of his
-own life, and the touching copy of verses on a departed friend, that are
-to be found in the notes to one of his satires; and there are feelings
-and circumstances in this world, before which politics and satire, and
-poetry, are of little importance’—(_How little knew’st thou of
-Calista!_)—‘feelings, that triumph over infirmity and distaste of every
-sort, and only render us anxious, in our respect for them, to be thought
-capable of appreciating them ourselves. The world, with all its hubbub,
-slides away from before one on such occasions; and we only see humanity
-in all its better weakness, and let us add, in all its beauty.
-
-‘The author will think what he pleases of this effusion of ours. It is
-an interval in the battle, during which we only wish to show ourselves
-fellow-men with him. Afterwards, he may resume his hostilities, if he
-has any, and we will draw our swords as before.
-
- _For the ‘Gentleman’s Magazine.’ Dec. 18, 1815._
-
- ‘Mr. Urban,—I am one of those who love to contemplate the “frail
- memorials” of the dead, and do not, therefore, count the solitary
- hours, occasionally spent in a church-yard, among the most
- melancholy ones of my life. But in London, this is a gratification
- rarely to be found; for, either through caution, or some less worthy
- motive, the cemeteries are closed against the stranger. I have been
- in the practice of passing by the chapel in South Audley Street,
- Grosvenor Square, almost every day, for several weeks, yet never saw
- the door of the burying-ground open till yesterday. I did not
- neglect the opportunity thus offered, but walked in. I found it far
- more spacious and airy than I expected; but I met with nothing very
- novel or interesting till I came to a low tomb, plain but neat,
- where I was both pleased and surprised by the following inscription,
- which, I believe, has never yet appeared in print, and which seems
- not unworthy of your miscellany.
-
- M. D.
-
- Here lies the Body
- of ANN DAVIES,
- (for more than twenty years)
- Servant to William Gifford.[74]
- She died February 6, 1815,
- in the forty-third year of her age,
- of a tedious and painful malady,
- which she bore
- with exemplary patience and resignation.
-
- Her deeply-afflicted master
- erected this stone to her memory,
- as a faithful testimony
- of her uncommon worth,
- and of his perpetual gratitude,
- respect and affection,
- for her long and meritorious services.
-
- Though here unknown, dear Ann, thy ashes rest,
- Still lives thy memory in one grateful breast,
- That traced thy course through many a painful year,
- And marked thy humble hope, thy pious fear.—
- O! when this frame, which yet, while life remained,
- Thy duteous love, with trembling hand, sustained,
- Dissolves (as soon it must) may that Bless’d Pow’r
- Who beamed on thine, illume my parting hour!
- So shall I greet thee, where no ills annoy,
- And what was sown in grief, is reap’d in joy;
- Where worth, obscured below, bursts into day,
- And those are paid, whom Earth could never pay.’[75]
-
-It seems then, you can extract the pathetic though not the humorous, out
-of persons who are not ‘gentlemen or gentlewomen.’ It was the amiable
-weakness thus noticed, that made you take such pains to do away the
-suspicion of a particular partiality for low people. You could not
-afford ‘the frail memorial’ of your private virtues to get beyond the
-inscription on a tomb-stone, or the poet’s corner of the Gentleman’s
-Magazine. The natural sympathies of the undoubted translator of Juvenal
-might be a prejudice to the official character of the anonymous editor
-of the Quarterly Review. You were determined to hear no more of this
-epitaph, and ‘other such dulcet diseases’[76] of yours.—You perhaps
-recollect, Sir, that the columns of the Examiner newspaper, which gave
-you such a premature or posthumous credit for some ‘compunctious
-visitings of nature,’ also contained the first specimen of the Story of
-Rimini. You seem to have said on that occasion with Iago, ‘You are well
-tuned now,—but I’ll set down the pegs that make this music, _as honest
-as I am_.’—That Mr. Hunt should have supposed it possible for a moment,
-that a government automaton was accessible to anything like a liberal
-concession, is one of those deplorable mistakes which constantly put men
-who are ‘made of penetrable stuff,’ at the mercy of those who are not.
-The amiable and elegant author of Rimini thought he was appealing to
-something human in your breast, in the recollection of your ‘Dear Ann
-Davies’; he touched the springs, and found them ‘stuffed with paltry
-blurred sheets’ of the Quarterly Review, with notes from Mr. Murray, and
-directions how to proceed with the author, from the Admiralty Scribe.
-You retorted his sympathy with ‘one whom earth could never pay,’ by
-laughing to scorn his honest laborious ‘tub-tumbling viragos,’ whose red
-elbows and coarse fists prevented so inelegant a contrast to the pining
-and sickly form whose loss you deplore. Is there anything in your nature
-and disposition that draws to it only the infirm in body and oppressed
-in mind; or that, while it clings to power for support, seeks
-consolation in the daily soothing spectacle of physical malady or morbid
-sensibility? The air you breathe seems to infect; and your friendship to
-be a canker-worm that blights its objects with unwholesome and premature
-decay. You are enamoured of suffering, and are at peace only with the
-dead.—Even if you had been accessible to remorse as a political critic,
-Mr. Hunt had committed himself with you (past forgiveness) in your
-character of a pretender to poetry about town. The following lines in
-his Feast of the Poets, must have occasioned you ‘a few mirthful
-sensations,’ which you have not yet acknowledged, except by deeds.—
-
- ‘A hem was then heard, consequential and snapping,
- And a sour little gentleman walked with a rap in.
- He bow’d, look’d about him, seem’d cold, and sat down,
- And said,[77] “I’m surpris’d that you’ll visit this town:—
- To be sure, there are one or two of us who know you,
- But as for the rest, they are all much below you.
- So stupid, in general, the natives are grown,
- They really prefer Scotch reviews to their own;
- So that what with their taste, their reformers, and stuff,
- They have sicken’d myself and my friends long enough.”
- “Yourself and your friends!” cried the God in high glee;
- “And pray my frank visitor, who may you be?”
- “Who be?” cried the other; “why really—this tone—
- William Gifford’s a name, I think pretty well known.”
- “Oh—now I remember,” said Phœbus;—“ah true—
- My thanks to that name are undoubtedly due:
- The rod, that got rid of the Cruscas and Lauras,
- —That plague of the butterflies—sav’d me the horrors;
- The Juvenal too stops a gap in one’s shelf,
- At least in what Dryden has not done himself;
- And there’s something, which even distaste must respect,
- In the self-taught example, that conquer’d neglect.
- But not to insist on the recommendations
- Of modesty, wit, and a small stock of patience,
- My visit just now is to poets alone,
- And not to small critics, however well known.”
- So saying, he rang, to leave nothing in doubt,
- And the sour little gentleman bless’d himself out.’
-
-_Thus painters write their names at Co._ For this passage and the
-temperate and judicious note which accompanies it, it is no wonder that
-you put the author—of Rimini, in Newgate, without the Sheriff’s warrant.
-In order to give as favourable an impression of that poem as you could,
-you began your account of it by saying that it had been composed in
-Newgate, though you knew that it had not; but you also knew that the
-name of Newgate would sound more grateful to certain ears, to pour
-flattering poison into which is the height of your abject ambition. In
-this courtly inuendo which ushered in your wretched verbal criticism (it
-is the more disgusting to see such gross and impudent prevarication
-combined with such petty captiousness) you were guided not by a regard
-to truth, but to your own ends; and yet you say somewhere, very
-oracularly, out of contradiction to me, that ‘not to prefer the true to
-the agreeable, where they are inconsistent, is folly.’ You have mistaken
-the word: it is not folly, but knavery.[78]
-
-4. You say you have no objection to my ‘praising my own chivalrous
-eloquence’; and I say that the insinuation is impertinent and untrue.
-The paper in which that phrase occurs is written by Mr. Hunt, as you
-know, and is an answer to some observations of mine on the poetical
-temperament in a preceding number _On the Causes of Methodism_. Mr.
-Hunt’s having taken upon him ‘to praise my chivalrous eloquence,’
-without consulting you, appeared no doubt a great piece of presumption;
-and you punished me by magnifying this indiscretion into the enormity of
-my having praised myself. I might as well say that Mr. Canning had made
-a fulsome eulogy on his own private virtues and public principles in
-your dedication of the edition of Ben Jonson to him.—You say indeed in
-the last paragraph of your criticism that ‘you understand some of the
-papers to be by Mr. Hunt; that it is he who is the droll or merry fellow
-of the piece; who has shocked you by writing eternally about
-washerwomen, etc. but that you cannot stay to distinguish between us,
-and that we must divide our respective share of merit between
-ourselves.’ The share of merit in that work may indeed be so small that
-it is of little consequence who has the reversion of any part of it, but
-I will take care that a cat’s-paw shall not be put on the pannel of my
-_quantum meruit_, nor take measure of my capacity with a mechanic rule,
-marked by ignorance and servility, nor turn the scale of public opinion
-by throwing in false weights as he pleases, nor make both of us
-ridiculous, by attributing to each the peculiarities of the other, with
-whatever exaggerated interpretation he chuses to put upon them. By this
-transposition of persons, which is not a matter of indifference as you
-pretend, you gain this advantage which you have no right to gain. You
-can at any time apply to me or Mr. Hunt the obnoxious points in your
-account of either, and improve upon them, as it suits your purpose. By
-combining the extremes of individual character, you make a very strange
-and wilful compound of your own. It is the same person, and yet it is
-not one person but two persons, according to the critical creed you
-would establish, who is a merry fellow, and a sour Jacobin; who is all
-gaiety and all gloom; a person who rails at poets, and yet is himself a
-poet; a hater of cats, and of cat’s-paws;[79] a reviler of Mr. Pitt, and
-a panegyrist upon washerwomen. If, Sir, your friend, Mr. Hoppner, of
-whom, as you tell us[80] you discreetly said nothing, while he was
-struggling with obscurity, lest it should be imputed to the partiality
-of friendship, but whom you praised and dedicated to, as soon as he
-became popular, to shew your disinterestedness and deference to public
-opinion, if even this artist, whom you celebrate as a painter of
-flattering likenesses, had undertaken to unite in one piece the most
-striking features and characteristic expression of his and your common
-friends, had improved your lurking archness of look into Mr. Murray’s
-gentle, downcast obliquity of vision; had joined Mr. Canning’s drooping
-nose to Mr. Croker’s aspiring chin, the clear complexion (the _splendida
-bilis_) of the one, to the candid self-complacent aspect of the other;
-had forced into the same preposterous medley, the invincible _hauteur_
-and satanic pride of Mr. Pitt’s physiognomy, with the dormant meaning
-and admirable nonchalance of Lord Castlereagh’s features, the manly
-sleekness of Charles Long, and the monumental outline of John
-Kemble—what mortal would have owned the likeness!—I too, Sir, must claim
-the privilege of the _principium individuationis_, for myself as well as
-my neighbours; I will sit for no man’s picture but my own, and not to
-you for that; I am not desirous to play so many parts as Bottom, and as
-to his ass’s head which you would put upon my shoulders, it will do for
-you to wear the next time you shew yourself in Mr. Murray’s shop, or for
-your friend Mr. Southey to take with him, whenever he appears at Court.
-
-As to the difference of political sentiment between the writer of the
-Round Table and the writer of the article in the Review, which forms the
-heavy burthen of your flippant censure, I cannot consider that as an
-accusation. You have many other objections to make: such as that,
-because Mr. Addison wrote some very pleasing papers on the Pleasures of
-the Imagination, I am not willing to fall short of ‘my illustrious
-predecessor’; and ‘accordingly,’ you say, ‘we hear much of poetry and of
-painting, and of music and of _gusto_.’ Is this the only reason you can
-conceive why any one should take an interest in such things; or did you
-write your Baviad and Mæviad that you might not fall short of Pope, your
-translation of Juvenal that you might surpass Dryden, or did you turn
-commentator on the poets, that you might be on a par with ‘your
-illustrious predecessors’—‘from slashing Bentley down to piddling
-Theobalds’? Of Hogarth you make me say, quoting from your favourite
-treatise on washerwomen, that ‘he is too apt to perk morals and
-sentiments in your face.’ You cannot comprehend my definition of
-_gusto_, which you do not ascribe to any defect in yourself. My account
-of Titian and Vandyke’s colouring, appears to you very odd, because it
-is like the things described, and you have no idea of the things
-described. If I had described the style of these two painters in terms
-applicable to them both, and to all other painters, you would have
-thought the precision of the style equal to the justness of the
-sentiment. A distinction without a difference satisfies you, for you can
-understand or repeat a common-place. It is the pointing out the real
-differences of things that offends you, for you have no idea of what is
-meant; and a writer who gets at all below the surface of a question,
-necessarily gets beyond your depth, and you can hardly contain your
-wonder at his presumption and shallowness. You quote half a dozen
-detached sentences of mine, as ‘convincing instances of affectation and
-paradox,’ (such as, _The definition of a true patriot is a good hater—He
-who speaks two languages has no country_, etc.) and which taken from the
-context to which they belong, and of which they are brought as extreme
-illustrations, may be so, but which you cannot answer in the connection
-in which they stand, and which you detach from the general speculation
-with which you dare not cope, to bring them more into the focus of your
-microscopic vision, and that you may deal with them more at ease and in
-safety on your old ground of literal and verbal quibbling.
-
-You do not like the subjects of my Essays in general. You complain in
-particular of ‘my eager vituperation of good nature and good-natured
-people’; and yet with this you have, as I should take it, nought to do:
-you object to my sweeping abuse of poets, as (with the exception of
-Milton) dishonest men,[81] with which you have as little to do; you are
-no poet, and of course, honest! You do not like my abuse of the Scotch
-at which the Irish were delighted, nor my abuse of the Irish at which
-the Scotch were not displeased, nor my abuse of the English, which I can
-understand; but I wonder you should not like my abuse of the French. You
-say indeed that ‘no abuse which is directed against whole classes of men
-is of much importance,’ and yet you and your Anti-Jacobin friends have
-been living upon this sort of abuse for the last twenty years. You add
-with characteristic ‘no meaning’—‘_If undeserved_, it is utterly
-impotent and may be well utterly despised.’ The last part of the
-proposition may be true, but abuse is not without effect, because
-undeserved, nor is a thing utterly impotent because it is thoroughly
-despicable. You, Sir, have power which is considerable, in proportion as
-it is despicable!
-
-I confess, Sir, the Round Table did not take; ‘it was _Caveare_ to the
-multitude,’ but the reason, I think, was not that the abuse in it was
-undeserved, but that I have there spoken the truth of too many persons
-and things. In writing it, I preferred the true to the agreeable, which
-I find to be an unpardonable fault. Yet I am not aware of any sentiment
-in the work which ought to give offence to an honest and inquiring mind,
-for I think there is none that does not evidently proceed from a
-conviction of its truth and a bias to what is right. My object in
-writing it was to set down such observations as had occurred to me from
-time to time on different subjects, and as appeared to be any ways worth
-preserving. I wished to make a sort of _Liber Veritatis_, a set of
-studies from human life. As my object was not to flatter, neither was it
-to offend or contradict others, but to state my own feelings or opinions
-such as they really were, but more particularly of course when this had
-not been done before, and where I thought I could throw any new light
-upon a subject. In doing so, I endeavoured to fix my attention only on
-the thing I was writing about, and which had struck me in some
-particular manner, which I wished to point out to others, with the best
-reasons or explanations I could give. I was not the slave of prejudices;
-nor do I think I was the dupe of my own vanity. To repeat what has been
-said a thousand times is common-place: to contradict it because it has
-been so said, is not originality. A truth is, however, not the worse but
-the better for being new. I did not try to think with the multitude nor
-to differ with them, but to think for myself; and the having done this
-with some boldness and some effect is the height of my offending. I
-wrote to the public with the same sincerity and want of disguise as if I
-had been making a register of my private thoughts; and this has been
-construed by some into a breach of decorum. The affectation I have been
-accused of was merely my sometimes stating a thing in an extreme point
-of view for fear of not being understood; and my love of paradox may, I
-think, be accounted for from the necessity of counteracting the
-obstinacy of prejudice. If I have been led to carry a remark too far, it
-was because others would not allow it to have any force at all. My
-object was to shew the latent operation of some unsuspected principle,
-and I therefore took only some one view of that particular subject. I
-was chiefly anxious that the germ of thought should be true and
-original; that I should put others in possession of what I meant, and
-then left it to find its level in the operation of common sense, and to
-have its excesses corrected by other causes. The principle will be found
-true, even where the application is extravagant or partial. I have not
-been wedded to my particular speculations with the spirit of a partisan.
-I wrote for instance an Essay on Pedantry, to qualify the extreme
-contempt into which it has fallen, and to shew the necessary advantages
-of an absorption of the whole mind in some favourite study, and I wrote
-an Essay on the Ignorance of the Learned to lessen the undue admiration
-of Learning, and to shew that it is not everything. I gained very few
-converts to either of these opinions. You reproach me with the cynical
-turn of many of my Essays, which are in fact prose-satires; but when you
-say I hate every thing but washerwomen, you forget what you had before
-said that I was a great imitator of Addison, and wrote much about
-‘poetry and painting, and music and _gusto_.’ You make no mention of my
-character of Rousseau, or of the paper on Actors and Acting. You also
-forget my praise of John Buncle! As to my style, I thought little about
-it. I only used the word which seemed to me to signify the idea I wanted
-to convey, and I did not rest till I had got it. In seeking for truth, I
-sometimes found beauty. As to the facility of which you, Sir, and others
-accuse me, it has not been acquired at once nor without pains. I was
-eight years in writing eight pages, under circumstances of inconceivable
-and ridiculous discouragement. As to my figurative and gaudy
-phraseology, you reproach me with it because you never heard of what I
-had written in my first dry manner. I afterwards found a popular mode of
-writing necessary to convey subtle and difficult trains of reasoning,
-and something more than your meagre vapid style, to force attention to
-original observations, which did not restrict themselves to making a
-parade of the discovery of a worm-eaten date, or the repetition of an
-obsolete prejudice. You say that it is impossible to remember what I
-write after reading it:—One remembers to have read what you
-write—_before_! In that you have the advantage of me, to be sure. You in
-vain endeavour to account for the popularity of some of my writings,
-from the trick of arranging words in a variety of forms without any
-correspondent ideas, like the newly-invented optical toy. You have not
-hit upon the secret, nor will you be able to avail yourself of it when I
-tell you. It is the old story—_that I think what I please, and say what
-I think_. This accounts, Sir, for the difference between you and me in
-so many respects. I think only of the argument I am defending; you are
-only thinking whether you write grammar. My opinions are founded on
-reasons which I try to give; yours are governed by motives which you
-keep to yourself. It has been my business all my life to get at the
-truth as well as I could, merely to satisfy my own mind: it has been
-yours to suppress the evidence of your senses and the dictates of your
-understanding, if you ever found them at variance with your convenience
-or the caprices of others. I do not suppose you ever in your life took
-an interest in any abstract question for its own sake, or have a
-conception of the possibility of any one else doing so. If you had, you
-would hardly insist on my changing characters with you. Yet you make
-this the condition of my receiving any favour or lenity at your hands.
-It is no matter, Sir: I will try to do without it.
-
-It appears by your own account, that all the other offences of the Round
-Table would hardly have roused your resentment, had it not been that I
-have spoken of Mr. Pitt and Mr. Burke, not in the hackneyed terms of a
-treasury underling. It was this that filled up the measure of my
-iniquity, and the storm burst on my devoted head. After quoting one or
-two half sentences from the character of Mr. Pitt,[82] in which I
-ascribe the influence of his oratory almost entirely to a felicitous and
-imposing arrangement of words, and the whole of a short note on Mr.
-Burke’s political apostacy, which I had fancifully ascribed to his
-jealousy of Rousseau, you add with great sincerity:—‘We are far from
-intending to write a single word in answer to this loathsome trash’—(it
-would have been well if you had made and kept the same resolution in
-other cases,) ‘but we confess that these passages chiefly excited us to
-take the trouble of noticing the work. The author might have described
-washerwomen for ever; complimented himself unceasingly on his own
-“chivalrous eloquence”; prosed interminably about Chaucer; written, if
-possible, in a more affected, silly, confused, ungrammatical style, and
-believed, as he now believes, that he was surpassing Addison, we should
-not have meddled with him; but if the creature, in his endeavours to
-crawl into the light, must take his way over the tombs of illustrious
-men, disfiguring the records of their greatness with the slime and filth
-which marks his track, it is right to point him out that he may be flung
-back to the situation in which nature designed that he should grovel’ p.
-159. And this, Sir, from you who wrote or procured to be inserted in the
-Quarterly Review, that nefarious attack on the character of Mr. Fox,
-which was distinguished and is still remembered among the slime and
-filth which has marked its track into day, over the characters and
-feelings of the living and the dead. If I, Sir, had written that ‘foul
-and vulgar invective’ against an individual whom you did not choose to
-let ‘rest in his grave,’ if I had been ‘such a thing’ as the writer of
-that article, I might, (as you say,) have described washerwomen for
-ever, and have fancied myself a better writer than ‘the courtly
-Addison,’ and you, Sir, would have encouraged me in the delusion, for I
-should have been a court-tool, _your_ tool. But you state the thing
-clearly and unanswerably. I was not a court-tool, your tool, and
-therefore I was to be made your victim. There is a difference of
-political opinion between you and me; therefore you undertake not only
-to condemn that opinion, but to proscribe the writer. Do you do this on
-your own authority, or on Mr. Croker’s, or on whose? As I did not
-consider it as sacrilege to criticise the style and the opinions of the
-two great men who have contributed to make this country what it is, a
-fief held by a junto, of which men like you are the organs, in trust and
-for the benefit of the common cause of despotism throughout Europe, I,
-and every other writer like me, professing or maintaining anything like
-independence of spirit or consistency of opinion, is ‘to be flung back
-into his original obscurity, and stifled in the filth and slime’ of the
-Quarterly Review, or its drain, Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine. You
-began the experiment upon the Round Table; you have tried it twice
-since, and for the last time.
-
-If any doubts could ever have been entertained on the subject of your
-motives and views, you have taken care to remove them. Thus you conclude
-your account of the characters of Shakespear’s plays with saying, that
-you should not have condescended to notice the senseless and wicked
-sophistry of the work at all, but that ‘you conceived it might not be
-unprofitable to shew how small a portion of talent and literature is
-necessary to carry on the trade of sedition.’ I should think it requires
-as much talent and literature to carry on my trade as yours. This
-acknowledgment of yours is ‘remarkable for its truth and _naiveté_.’ It
-is a pledge from your own mouth of your impartiality and candour. With
-this object in view, ‘you have selected a few specimens of my ethics and
-criticism,’ (they are very few, and of course you would select no
-others,) just sufficient, (with your garbling and additions,) to prove
-‘that my knowledge of Shakespear and the English language is exactly on
-a par with the purity of my morals, and the depth of my understanding.’
-But did it not occur to you in making this officious declaration, or
-would it not occur to any one else in reading it, that this undertaking
-of yours might be no less ‘profitable’ and acceptable, even supposing
-the portion of talent displayed by the author not to be small but great?
-Would it not be more necessary in this case to do away the scandal that
-there was any talent or literature on the side of ‘sedition’? The
-greater the shock given to the complacency of servility and corruption,
-by an opinion getting abroad that there was any knowledge of Shakespear
-or the English language except on the minister’s side of the question,
-would it not be the more absolutely incumbent on you as the head of the
-literary police, to arrest such an opinion in the outset, to crush it
-before it gathered strength, and to produce the article in question as
-your warrant? Why, what a disgrace to literature and to loyalty, if
-owing to the neglect and supineness of the editor of the Quarterly
-Review, a work written without an atom of cant or hypocrisy, and of
-course with a very small portion of talent and literature, should, in
-the space of three months get into a second edition, and be fast
-advancing to a third, be noticed in the Edinburgh Review, and be talked
-of by persons who never looked into the Examiner; and how necessary
-without loss of time, to counteract the mischievous inference from all
-this, restore the taste of the public to its legitimate tone, and
-satisfy the courteous reader, who ‘was well affected to the constitution
-in church and state as now established,’ that in future he must look for
-a knowledge of Shakespear only in the editor of Ben Jonson, of the
-English language in the private tutor of Lord Grosvenor, for purity of
-morals in the translator of Juvenal, and for depth of understanding in
-the notes to the Baviad and Mæviad! Your employers, Mr. Gifford, do not
-pay their hirelings for nothing—for condescending to notice weak and
-wicked sophistry; for pointing out to contempt what excites no
-admiration; for cautiously selecting a few specimens of bad taste and
-bad grammar, where nothing else is to be found. They want your
-invincible pertness, your mercenary malice, your impenetrable dulness,
-your barefaced impudence, your pragmatical self-sufficiency, your
-hypocritical zeal, your pious frauds to stand in the gap of their
-prejudices and pretensions, to fly-blow and taint public opinion, to
-defeat independent efforts, to apply not the sting of the scorpion but
-the touch of the torpedo to youthful hopes, to crawl and leave the slimy
-track of sophistry and lies over every work that does not ‘dedicate its
-sweet leaves’ to some luminary of the Treasury Bench, or is not fostered
-in the hot-bed of corruption. This is your office; ‘this is what is
-looked for at your hands, and this you do not baulk’—to sacrifice what
-little honesty, and prostitute what little intellect you possess to any
-dirty job you are commissioned to execute. ‘They keep you as an ape does
-an apple, in the corner of his jaw, first mouthed to be last swallowed.’
-You are, by appointment, literary toad-eater to greatness, and taster to
-the court. You have a natural aversion to whatever differs from your own
-pretensions, and an acquired one for what gives offence to your
-superiors. Your vanity panders to your interest, and your malice
-truckles only to your love of power. If your instinctive or premeditated
-abuse of your enviable trust were found wanting in a single instance; if
-you were to make a single slip in getting up your select Committee of
-Inquiry and Green Bag Report of the State of Letters, your occupation
-would be gone. You would never after obtain a squeeze of the hand from a
-great man, or a smile from a punk of quality. The great and powerful
-(whom you call the wise and good) do not like to have the privacy of
-their self-love startled by the obtrusive and unmanageable claims of
-literature and philosophy, except through the intervention of persons
-like you, whom, if they have common penetration, they soon find out to
-be without any superiority of intellect; or, if they do not, whom they
-can despise for their meanness of soul. You ‘have the office opposite to
-St. Peter.’ You ‘keep a corner in the public mind, for foul prejudice
-and corrupt power to knot and gender in’; you volunteer your services to
-people of quality to ease scruples of mind and qualms of conscience; you
-‘lay the flattering unction’ of venal prose and laurelled verse to their
-souls. You persuade them that there is neither purity of morals, nor
-depth of understanding, except in themselves and their hangers-on; and
-would prevent the unhallowed names of liberty and humanity from being
-ever whispered in ears polite! You, Sir, do you not do all this? I cry
-you mercy then: I took you for the Editor of the Quarterly Review!
-
-In general, you wisely avoid committing yourself upon any question,
-farther than to hint a difference of opinion, and to assume an air of
-self-importance upon it. Thus you say, after quoting some remarks of
-mine, not very respectful to Henry VIII. ‘We need not answer this
-gabble,’ as if you were offended at its absurdity, not at its truth; and
-were yourself ready to assert (were it worth while) that Henry VIII. was
-an estimable character, or that he had not his minions and creatures
-about him in his life-time, who were proud to hail him as the best of
-kings. If so, you have the authority of Mr. Burke against you, who
-indulges himself in a very Jacobinical strain of invective against this
-bloated pattern of royalty, and brute-image of the Divinity. Do you mean
-to say, that the circumstances of external pomp and unbridled power,
-which I have pointed out in ‘the gabble you will not answer’ as
-determining the character of kings, do not make them what for the most
-part they are, feared in their life-time and scorned by after-ages? If
-so, you must think Quevedo a libeller and incendiary, who makes his
-guide to the infernal regions, on being asked ‘if there were no more
-kings,’ answer emphatically—‘Here are all that ever lived!’ You say that
-‘the mention of a court or of a king always throws me into a fit of
-raving.’ Do you then really admire those plague spots of history, and
-scourges of human nature, Richard II., Richard III., King John, and
-Henry VIII.? Do you with Mr. Coleridge, in his late Lectures, contend
-that not to fall down in prostration of soul before the abstract majesty
-of kings as it is seen in the diminished perspective of centuries,
-argues an inherent littleness of mind? Or do you extend the moral of
-your maxim—‘Speak not of the imputed weaknesses of the Great’—beyond the
-living to the dead, thus passing an attainder on history, and proving
-‘truth to be a liar’ from the beginning? ‘Speak out, Grildrig!’
-
-You do well to confine yourself to the hypocrite; for you have too
-little talent for the sophist. Yet in two instances you have attempted
-an answer to an opinion I had expressed; and in both you have shewn how
-little you can understand the commonest question. The first is as
-follows:—‘In his remarks upon Coriolanus, which contain the concentrated
-venom of his malignity, he has libelled our great poet as a friend of
-arbitrary power, in order that he may introduce an invective against
-human nature. “Shakspeare himself seems to have had a leaning to the
-arbitrary side of the question, perhaps from some feeling of contempt
-for his own origin; and to have spared no occasion of baiting the
-rabble.”’
-
-How do you prove that he did not? By shewing with a little delicate
-insinuation how he would have done just what I say he did.—‘Shall we not
-be dishonouring the gentle Shakspeare by answering such calumny, when
-every page of his works supplies its refutation?’[83]—‘Who has painted
-with more cordial feelings the tranquil innocence of humble life?’
-[True.] ‘Who has furnished more instructive lessons to the great upon
-“the insolence of office”—“the oppressor’s wrong”—or the abuses of brief
-authority’—[which you would hallow through all time]—‘or who has more
-severely stigmatised those “who crook the pregnant hinges of the knee
-where thrift may follow fawning?”’ [Granted, none better.] ‘It is true
-he was not actuated by an envious hatred of greatness’—[so that to
-stigmatise servility and corruption does not always proceed from envy
-and a love of mischief]—‘he was not at all likely, had he lived in our
-time, to be an orator in Spa-fields or the editor of a seditious Sunday
-newspaper’—[To have delivered Mr. Coleridge’s _Conciones ad Populum_, or
-to have written Mr. Southey’s Wat Tyler]—‘he knew what discord would
-follow if degree were taken away’—[As it did in France from the taking
-away the degree between the tyrant and the slave, and those little
-convenient steps and props of it, the Bastile, Lettres de Cachet, and
-Louis XV.‘s _Palais aux cerfs_]—‘And _therefore_, with the wise and good
-of every age, he pointed out the injuries that must arise to society
-from a turbulent rabble instigated to mischief by men not much more
-enlightened, and infinitely more worthless than themselves.’
-
-So that it would appear by your own account that Shakspeare had a
-discreet leaning to the arbitrary side of the question, and, had he
-lived in our time, would probably have been a writer in the Courier, or
-a contributor to the Quarterly Review! It is difficult to know which to
-admire most in this, the weakness or the cunning. I have said that
-Shakspeare has described both sides of the question, and you ask me very
-wisely, ‘Did he confine himself to one?’ No, I say that he did not: but
-I suspect that he had a leaning to one side, and has given it more
-quarter than it deserved. My words are: ‘_Coriolanus_ is a storehouse of
-political common-places. The arguments for and against aristocracy and
-democracy, on the privileges of the few and the claims of the many, on
-liberty and slavery, power and the abuse of it, peace and war, are here
-very ably handled, with the spirit of a poet and the acuteness of a
-philosopher. Shakspeare himself seems to have had a leaning to the
-arbitrary side of the question, perhaps from some feeling of contempt
-for his own origin, and to have spared no occasion of baiting the
-rabble. _What he says of them is very true: what he says of their
-betters is also very true, though he dwells less upon it._’
-
-I then proceed to account for this by shewing how it is that ‘the cause
-of the people is but little calculated for a subject for poetry; or that
-the language of poetry naturally falls in with the language of power.’ I
-affirm, Sir, that poetry, that the imagination, generally speaking,
-delights in power, in strong excitement, as well as in truth, in good,
-in right, whereas, pure reason and the moral sense approve only of the
-true and good. I proceed to shew that this general love or tendency to
-immediate excitement or theatrical effect, no matter how produced, gives
-a bias to the imagination often inconsistent with the greatest good,
-that in poetry it triumphs over principle, and bribes the passions to
-make a sacrifice of common humanity. You say that it does not, that
-there is no such original sin in poetry, that it makes no such sacrifice
-or unworthy compromise between poetical effect and the still small voice
-of reason. And how do you prove that there is no such principle giving a
-bias to the imagination, and a false colouring to poetry? Why by asking
-in reply to the instances where this principle operates, and where no
-other can, with much modesty and simplicity—‘But are these the only
-topics that afford delight in poetry, etc.’ No; but these objects do
-afford delight in poetry, and they afford it in proportion to their
-strong and often tragical effect, and not in proportion to the good
-produced, or their desirableness in a moral point of view. ‘Do we read
-with more pleasure of the ravages of a beast of prey, than of the
-shepherd’s pipe upon the mountain?’ No; but we do read with pleasure of
-the ravages of a beast of prey, and we do so on the principle I have
-stated, namely, from the sense of power abstracted from the sense of
-good; and it is the same principle that makes us read with admiration
-and reconciles us in fact to the triumphant progress of the conquerors
-and mighty hunters of mankind, who come to stop the shepherd’s pipe upon
-the mountains, and sweep away his listening flock. Do you mean to deny
-that there is anything imposing to the imagination in power, in
-grandeur, in outward shew, in the accumulation of individual wealth and
-luxury, at the expense of equal justice and the common weal? Do you deny
-that there is anything in ‘the pride, pomp, and circumstance of glorious
-war, that makes ambition virtue,’ in the eyes of admiring multitudes? Is
-this a new theory of the Pleasures of the Imagination, which says that
-the pleasures of the imagination do not take rise solely in the
-calculations of the understanding? Is it a paradox of my making, that
-‘one murder makes a villain, millions a hero!’ Or is it not true that
-here, as in other cases, the enormity of the evil overpowers and makes a
-convert of the imagination by its very magnitude? You contradict my
-reasoning, because you know nothing of the question, and you think that
-no one has a right to understand what you do not. My offence against
-purity in the passage alluded to, ‘which contains the concentrated venom
-of my malignity,’ is, that I have admitted that there are tyrants and
-slaves abroad in the world; and you would hush the matter up, and
-pretend that there is no such thing, in order that there may be nothing
-else. Farther, I have explained the cause, the subtle sophistry of the
-human mind, that tolerates and pampers the evil, in order to guard
-against its approaches; you would conceal the cause in order to prevent
-the cure, and to leave the proud flesh about the heart to harden and
-ossify into one impenetrable mass of selfishness and hypocrisy, that we
-may not ‘sympathise in the distresses of suffering virtue’ in any case,
-in which they come in competition with the factitious wants and ‘imputed
-weaknesses of the great.’ You ask ‘are we gratified by the cruelties of
-Domitian or Nero?’ No, not we—they were too petty and cowardly to strike
-the imagination at a distance; but the Roman Senate tolerated them,
-addressed their perpetrators, exalted them into Gods, the Fathers of
-their people; they had pimps and scribblers of all sorts in their pay,
-their Senecas, etc. till a turbulent rabble thinking that there were no
-injuries to society greater than the endurance of unlimited and wanton
-oppression, put an end to the farce, and abated the nuisance as well as
-they could. Had you and I lived in those times, we should have been what
-we are now, I ‘a sour mal-content,’ and you ‘a sweet courtier.’ Your
-reasoning is ill put together; it wants sincerity, it wants ingenuity.
-To prove that I am wrong in saying that the love of power and heartless
-submission to it extend beyond the tragic stage to real life, to prove
-that there has been nothing heard but the shepherd’s pipe upon the
-mountain, and that the still sad music of humanity has never filled up
-the pauses to the thoughtful ear, you bring in illustration the
-cruelties of Domitian and Nero, whom you suppose to have been without
-flatterers, train-bearers, or executioners, and ‘the crimes of
-revolutionary France of a still blacker die,’ (a sentence which alone
-would have entitled you to a post of honour and secrecy under Sejanus,)
-which you suppose to have been without aiders or abettors. You speak of
-the horrors of Robespierre’s reign; (there you tread on velvet;) do you
-mean that these atrocities excited nothing but horror in revolutionary
-France, in undelivered France, in Paris, the centre and focus of anarchy
-and crime; or that the enthusiasm and madness with which they were acted
-and applauded, was owing to nothing but a long-deferred desire for truth
-and justice, and the collected vengeance of the human race? You do not
-mean this, for you never mean anything that has even an approximation to
-unfashionable truth in it. You add, ‘We cannot recollect, however, that
-these crimes were heard of with much satisfaction in this country.’ Then
-you have forgotten the years 1793 and 94, you have forgotten the
-addresses against republicans and levellers, you have forgotten Mr.
-Burke and his 80,000 incorrigible Jacobins.—‘Nor had we the misfortune
-to know any individual, (though we will not take upon us to deny that
-Mr. Hazlitt may have been of that description,)’ (I will take upon me to
-deny that) ‘who cried havoc, and enjoyed the atrocities of Robespierre
-and Carnot.’ Then at that time, Sir, you had not the good fortune to
-know Mr. Southey.[84]
-
-To return, you find fault with my toleration of those pleasant persons,
-Lucio, Pompey, and Master Froth, in Measure for Measure, and with my use
-of the word ‘natural morality.’ And yet, ‘the word is a good word, being
-whereby a man may be accommodated.’ If Pompey was a common bawd, you,
-Sir, are a court pimp. That is artificial morality. ‘Go to, a feather
-turns the scale of your avoir-du-pois.’ I have also, it seems, erred in
-using the term _moral_ in a way not familiar to you, as opposed to
-_physical_; and in that sense have applied it to the description of the
-mole on Imogen’s neck, ‘cinque-spotted, like the crimson drops i’ th’
-bottom of a cowslip.’ I have stated that there is more than a
-physical—there is a moral beauty in this image, and I think so still,
-though you may not comprehend how.
-
-You assert roundly that there is no such person as the black prince
-Morocchius,[85] in the Merchant of Venice. ‘He, (Mr. Hazlitt,) objects
-entirely to a personage of whom we never heard before, the black Prince
-Marocchius. With this piece of blundering ignorance, _which, with_ a
-thousand similar instances of his intimate acquaintance with the poet,
-clearly _prove_ that his enthusiasm for Shakespear is all affected, we
-conclude what we have to say of his folly; it remains to say a few words
-of his mischief.’ Vol. xxxiv. p. 463. I could not at first, Sir,
-comprehend your drift in this passage, and I can scarcely believe it
-yet. But I perceive that in Chalmers’s edition, the tawny suitor of
-Portia, who is called Morocchius in my common edition, goes by the style
-and title of Morocco. This important discovery proves, according to you,
-that my admiration of Shakespear is all affected, and that I can know
-nothing of the poet or his characters. So that the only title to
-admiration in Shakespear, not only in the Merchant of Venice, but in his
-other plays, all knowledge of his beauties, or proof of an intimate
-acquaintance with his genius, is confined to the alteration which Mr.
-Chalmers has adopted in the termination of the two last syllables of the
-name of this blackamoor, and his reading Morocco for Morocchius.
-Admirable grammarian, excellent critic! I do not wonder you think
-nothing of my Characters of Shakespear’s Plays, when I see what it is
-that you really admire and think worth the study in them. No, no, Mr.
-Gifford, you shall not persuade me by your broken English and
-‘red-lattice phrases,’ that the only thing in Shakespear worth knowing,
-was the baptismal name of this Prince of Morocco, or that no one can
-admire the author’s plays out of Mr Chalmers’s edition, or find anything
-to admire even there, except the new nomenclature of the _dramatis
-personæ_. If this is not your meaning in the passage here quoted, I do
-not know what it is; if it is not, I have done you great injustice in
-supposing that it is, for I am sure it cannot mean anything else so
-foolish and contemptible. You had begun this curious paragraph by
-saying, that ‘I had run through my set of phrases, and was completely at
-a stand’; and you bring as a damning proof of this, a repetition of two
-phrases. Do you believe that I had filled 300 pages with the repetition
-of two phrases? ‘Go, go, you’re a censorious ill man.’
-
-The deliberate hypocrisy of Regan and Gonerill, of which I spoke, I had
-explained in the sentence before by a periphrasis to mean their
-‘hypocritical pretensions to virtue.’ If I had no right to use the word
-hastily in this absolute sense, you had still less to confound the
-meaning of a whole passage. Edmund is indeed ‘a hypocrite to his father;
-he is a hypocrite to his brother, and to Regan and Gonerill’; but he is
-not a hypocrite to himself. This is that consummation of hypocrisy of
-which I spoke, and of which you ought to know something.
-
-I have commenced my observations on Lear, you say, with ‘an
-acknowledgment remarkable for its _naiveté_ and its truth’; the import
-of which remarkable acknowledgment is, that I find myself incompetent to
-do justice to this tragedy, by any criticism upon it. This you construe
-into a ‘determination on my part to write nonsense’; you seem, Sir, to
-have sat down with a determination to write something worse than
-nonsense. As a proof of my having fulfilled the promise, (which I had
-_not_ made,) you cite these words, ‘It is then the best of all
-Shakespear’s plays, for it is the one in which he was _most in
-earnest_‘; and add significantly, ‘Macbeth and Othello were mere _jeux
-d’esprit_, we presume.’ You may presume so, but not from what I have
-said. You only aim at being a word-catcher, and fail even in that. In
-like manner, you say, ‘If this means that we sympathise so much with the
-feelings and sentiments of Hamlet, that we identify ourselves with the
-character, we have to accuse Mr. Hazlitt of strangely misleading us a
-few pages back. “The moral of _Othello_ comes directly home to the
-business and bosoms of men; the interest in _Hamlet_ is more _remote_
-and reflex.” And yet it is we who are Hamlet.’—Yes, because we
-sympathise with Hamlet, in the way I have explained, and which you ought
-to have endeavoured at least to understand, as reflecting and moralising
-on the general distresses of human life, and not as particularly
-affected by those which come home to himself, as we see in Othello. You
-accuse me of stringing words together without meaning, and it is you who
-cannot connect two ideas together.
-
-You call me ‘a poor cankered creature,’ ‘a trader in sedition,’ ‘a
-wicked sophist,’ and yet you would have it believed that I am
-‘principally distinguished by an _indestructible_ love of flowers and
-odours, and dews and clear waters, and soft airs and sounds and bright
-skies, and woodland solitudes and moonlight bowers.’[86] I do not
-understand how you reconcile such ‘welcome and unwelcome things,’ but
-anything will do to feed your spleen at another’s expence, when it is
-the person and not the thing you dislike. Thus you complain of my style,
-that it is at times figurative, at times poetical, at times familiar,
-not always the same flat dull thing that you would have it. You point
-out the omission of a line in a quotation from a well-known passage in
-Shakespear. You do not however think the detection of this omission is a
-sufficient proof of your sagacity, but you proceed to assign as a motive
-for it, ‘That I do it to improve the metre,’ which is ridiculous. You
-say I conjure up objections to Shakespear which nobody ever thought of,
-in order to answer them. The objection to Romeo and Juliet, which I have
-answered, was made by the late Mr. Curran, as well as the objection to
-the want of interest and action in Paradise Lost, which I have answered
-in another place.—‘Thus he endeavours to convince one class of critics,
-that the poet’s genius was not confined to the production of stage
-effect by supernatural means. In another place he expresses his
-astonishment that Shakespear should be considered as a gloomy writer,
-who painted nothing but gorgons, hydras, and chimeras dire.’ One of
-these classes of critics which, you say, ‘are phantoms of my own
-creating,’ comprehends the whole French nation, and the other the
-greatest part of the English with Dr. Johnson at their head, who in his
-Preface, ‘one of the most perfect pieces of criticism since the days of
-Quintilian’ (and which might have been written in the days of Quintilian
-just as well as in ours) has neglected to expatiate on Shakespear’s
-‘_indestructible_ love of flowers and odours, and woodland solitudes and
-moonlight bowers.’ You know nothing of Shakespear, nor of what is
-thought about him: you mind only the text of the commentators. With
-respect to Mr. Wordsworth’s Ode, which I have dragged into my account of
-Romeo and Juliet, I did not quarrel with the poetical conceit, but with
-the metaphysical doctrine founded upon it by his school. There is a
-difference between ‘ends of verse and sayings of philosophers.’ If
-Shakespear had been a great German transcendental philosopher (either at
-the first or second hand) his talking of the music of the spheres might
-have rendered him suspected. You compare my account of Hamlet to the
-dashing style of a showman: I think the showman’s speech is proper to a
-show, and mine to Hamlet. You, Sir, have no sympathy in common with
-Hamlet; nothing to make him seem ever ‘present to your mind’s eye’; no
-feeling to produce such an hallucination in your mind, nor to make you
-tolerate it in others. You are an Ultra-Crepidarian critic.
-
-You laugh at my theory, that ‘Filch’s picking of pockets has ceased to
-be so good a jest as formerly,’ from the degeneracy of the age, that is,
-from the diminution of the practice, as at variance with the Police
-Report. Shortly after I had hazarded this piece of conjectural
-criticism, the Beggar’s Opera was hooted off the stage in
-America—because they have no Police Report there. I may have been
-premature in applying this conclusion from a highly advanced state of
-civilization, or from the degeneracy of the age we live in, to our own
-country.
-
-What you say of my remarks on the use which Shakespear makes of the
-principal analogy in Cymbeline, and of contrast in Macbeth is beneath an
-answer. You should confine yourself to mere matters of verbal criticism.
-Thus you object to my use of the term ‘logical diagrams’ as
-unprecedented and barbarous: yet we talk of syllogising in mode and
-figure, and besides, the word has been made pretty malleable by Mr.
-Burke. What do you say to his talking of ‘the geometricians and chemists
-of France, bringing the one from the dry bones of their diagrams, and
-the other from the soot of their furnaces, dispositions worse than
-indifferent to common feelings and habitudes.’ Would you call this
-‘slip-slop absurdity’? But to talk of _the dry bones of diagrams_, and
-escape with impunity from the censure of small critics, a man must
-assert that the king of this country ‘holds his crown in contempt of the
-choice of the people.’
-
-I am obliged to you for informing me of the real name of the person who
-wrote the ingenious parallel between Richard the Third and Macbeth.
-
-The article in the last Review on my Lectures on English Poetry,
-requires a very short notice.—You would gladly retract what you have
-said, but you dare not. You are a coward to public opinion and to your
-own. You begin by observing, ‘Mr. Hazlitt seems to have bound himself
-like Hannibal to wage everlasting war, not indeed against Rome, but
-against accurate reasoning, just observation, and precise, or even
-intelligible language.’ This might be true, if the opinion of the
-Quarterly Review were synonymous with accurate reasoning, just
-observation, and knowledge of language. ‘We have traced him in his two
-former predatory excursions on taste and common sense. Had he written on
-any other subject, we should scarcely have thought of watching his
-movements.’ You were ‘principally excited to notice’ the Round Table by
-some political heresies which had crept into it: you ‘condescended to
-notice’ the Characters of Shakespear’s Plays, ‘to shew how small a
-portion of talent and literature was necessary to carry on the trade of
-sedition.’ You have been tempted to watch my movements in the present
-work to shew how little talent and literature is necessary to write a
-popular work on poetry. ‘But though his book is dull, his theme is
-pleasing, and interests in spite of the author. As we read, we forget
-Mr. Hazlitt, to think of those concerning whom he writes.’ Do you think,
-Sir, that a higher compliment could come from you?
-
-It would neither be for my credit nor your own, that I should follow you
-in detail through your abortive attempts to deny me exactly those
-qualifications which you feel conscious that I possess, or afraid that
-others will ascribe to me. You are already bankrupt of your word, nor
-can I be admitted as an evidence in my own case. You say that I am
-utterly without originality, without a power of illustration, or
-language to make myself understood!—I shall leave it to the public to
-judge between us. There is one objection however which you make to me
-which is singular enough: viz. that I quote Shakespear. I can only
-answer, that ‘I would not change that vice for your best virtue.’ ‘If a
-trifling thing is to be told, he will not mention it in common language:
-he must give it, if possible, in words which the Bard of Avon has
-_somewhere_ used. Were _the beauty of the applications conspicuous_, we
-might forget or at least forgive, _the deformity_ produced _by the
-constant stitching in of these patches_‘—[_i.e._ by the beauty of the
-applications]. ‘Unfortunately, however, the phrases thus obtruded upon
-us _seem_ to be selected, not on account of _any intrinsic beauty_, but
-merely because they are _fantastic and unlike what would naturally occur
-to an ordinary writer_.’ Certainly, Sir, your style is very different
-from Shakespear’s. I observe in your notes to the Baviad and Mæviad, you
-diversify your matter by frequently quoting Greek.—Now it appears to me
-that these quotations of your’s add to the wit only by varying the type.
-If these learned patches ‘plagued the Cruscas and Lauras,’ my quotations
-have given other people ‘the horrors’!
-
-You quote my definition of poetry, and say that it is not a definition
-of anything, because it is completely unintelligible. To prove this, you
-take one word which occurs in it, and is no way important, the word
-_sympathy_, which you tell us has two significations, one anatomical,
-and the other moral; and poetry, according to you, ‘has no skill in
-surgery or ethics.’ I do not think this shews a want of clearness in my
-definition, but a want of good faith or understanding in you.
-
-You say that I get at a number of extravagant conclusions ‘by means
-sufficiently simple and common. He employs the term poetry in three
-distinct meanings, and his legerdemain consists in substituting one of
-these for the other. Sometimes it is the general appellation of a
-certain class of compositions, as when he says that poetry is graver
-than history. Secondly, it denotes the talent by which these
-compositions are produced; and it is in this sense that he calls poetry
-that fine particle within us, which produces in our being rarefaction,
-expansion, elevation and purification.’ [This is Mr. Gifford’s academic
-style, not mine.] ‘Thirdly, it denotes the subjects of which these
-compositions treat. It is in this meaning that he uses the term, when he
-says that all that is worth remembering in life is the poetry of it;
-that fear is poetry, that hope is poetry, that love is poetry; and in
-the very same sense he might assert that fear is sculpture and painting
-and music; that the crimes of Verres are the eloquence of Cicero, and
-the poetry of Milton the criticism of Mr. Hazlitt.’ It is true I have
-used the word poetry in the three senses above imputed to me, and I have
-done so, because the word has these three _distinct_ meanings in the
-English language, that is, it signifies the composition produced, the
-state of mind or faculty producing it, and, in certain cases, the
-subject-matter proper to call forth that state of mind. Your objection
-amounts to this, that in reasoning on a difficult question I write
-common English, and this is the whole secret of my extravagance and
-obscurity.—Do you mean that the distinguishing between the compositions
-of poetry, the talent for poetry, or the subject-matter of poetry, would
-have told us what _poetry_ is? This is what you would say, or you have
-no meaning at all. I have expressly treated the subject according to
-this very division, and I have endeavoured to define that common
-something which belongs to these several views of it, and determines us
-in the application of the same common name, viz. an unusual vividness in
-external objects or in our immediate impressions, exciting a movement of
-imagination in the mind, and leading by natural association or
-_sympathy_ to harmony of sound and the modulation of verse in expressing
-it. This is what you, Sir, cannot understand. I could not ‘assert in the
-same sense that fear is sculpture and painting, etc.’ because this would
-be an abuse of the English language: we talk of the _poetry of
-painting_, etc. which could not be, if poetry was confined to the
-technical sense of ‘lines in ten syllables.’ The crimes of Verres, I
-also grant, were not the same thing as the eloquence of Cicero, though I
-suspect you confound the crimes of revolutionary France with Mr. Pitt’s
-speeches; and as to Milton’s poetry and my criticisms, there is almost
-as much difference between them as between Milton’s poetry and your
-verses. You say, ‘the principal subjects of which poetry treats, are the
-passions and affections of mankind; we are all under the influence of
-our passions and affections, that is, in Mr. Hazlitt’s new language, we
-all act on the principles of poetry, and are in truth all poets. We all
-exert our muscles and limbs, therefore we are anatomists and surgeons;
-we have teeth which we employ in chewing, therefore we are dentists,’
-etc. Not at all; we are all poets, inasmuch as we are under the
-influence of the passions and imagination, that is, as we have certain
-common feelings, and undergo the same process of mind with the poet, who
-only expresses in a particular manner what he and all feel alike; but in
-exerting our muscles, we do not dissect them; in chewing with our teeth,
-we do not perform the part of dentists, etc. There is nothing parallel
-in the two cases. ‘You anticipate,’ you say, ‘these brilliant
-conclusions for me’; and do not perceive the difference between the
-extension of a logical principle, and an abuse of common language.—You
-proceed, ‘As another specimen of his definitions, we may take the
-following. “Poetry does not define the limits of sense, nor analyse the
-distinctions of the understanding, but signifies the excess of the
-imagination beyond the actual or ordinary impression of any object or
-feeling.” Poetry was at the beginning of the book asserted to be _an
-impression_; it is now _the excess of the imagination beyond an
-impression_; what this excess is we cannot tell, but at least it must be
-something very unlike an impression.’ Poetry at the beginning of the
-book was asserted to be not simply an impression, ‘but an impression _by
-its vividness exciting an involuntary movement of the imagination_: now,
-you say it is _the excess of the imagination beyond an impression_; and
-you bring this as a proof of a contradiction in terms. An impression, by
-its vividness exciting a movement of the imagination, you discover, must
-be something very unlike an impression, and as to the imagination
-itself, you cannot tell what it is; it is an unknown power in your
-poetical creed. What is most extraordinary is, that you had quoted the
-very passage which you here represent as a total contradiction to the
-latter, only two pages before. What, Sir, do you think of your readers?
-What must they think of you!—‘Though the _total want of meaning_,’ you
-add, ‘is the weightiest objection to such writing, yet _the abuse_ which
-it involves of _particular words and phrases_’ (in addition to a total
-want of meaning) ‘is very remarkable,’ (it must be so,) ‘and will not be
-overlooked by those who are aware of the inseparable connexion between
-justness of thought and precision of language.’ (You are not aware that
-there is no precise measure of thought or expression.) ‘What, in strict
-reasoning, can be meant by the impression of a feeling?’ (The impression
-which it makes on the mind, as distinct from some other to which it
-gives birth, is what I meant.) ‘How can _actual_ and _ordinary_ be used
-as synonymous?’ (They are not.) ‘Every impression must be an actual
-impression’; (there is then no such thing as an imaginary impression;)
-‘and the use of that epithet annihilates the limitations which Mr.
-Hazlitt meant’ (in the total want of all meaning,) ‘to guard his
-proposition.’ _We must speak by the card, or equivocation will undo us._
-You say, ‘you have not the faintest conception of what I mean by the
-heavenly bodies returning on the squares of the distances or on Dr.
-Chalmers’s Discourses.’ Nor will I tell you what I meant. _A knavish
-speech sleeps in a fool’s ear._ ‘As to the assertion that there can
-never be another Jacob’s dream, we see no reason why dreams should be
-scientific.’ Shakespear says, that dreams ‘_denote a foregone
-conclusion_.’ You quote what I say of Swift, and misrepresent it. ‘Mr.
-Hazlitt’s doctrine, therefore, is, that the inability to become mad, is
-very likely to drive a man mad.’ My doctrine is, that the inability to
-get rid of a favourite idea, when constantly thwarted, or of the
-impression of any object, however painful, merely because it is true, is
-likely to drive a man mad. It is this tenaciousness on a particular
-point that almost always destroys the general coherence of the
-understanding. I do not say that the inability to get rid of the
-distinction between right and wrong continued in Swift’s mind after he
-was mad—I say it contributed to drive him mad. I mean that a sense of
-great injustice often produces madness in individual cases, and that a
-strong sense of general injustice, and an abstracted view of human
-nature such as it is, compared with what it ought to be, is likely to
-produce the same effect in a mind like that of the author of Gulliver’s
-Travels. Do you understand yet? You do not go into my general character
-of Swift, which might have drawn you into something of a wider field of
-speculation; and you pick out a straggling sentence or two to cavil at
-in my account of Pope, of Chaucer, of Milton, and Shakespear, on which
-you are glad to discharge the gall that has been accumulating in your
-mind for several pages. If you think by this means, to put me or the
-public out of conceit with my writings, you have mistaken the matter
-entirely. You can only put down my arguments by meeting them fairly, or
-my style, by writing better than you do.
-
-‘We occasionally,’ you proceed, ‘discover a faint semblance of connected
-thinking in Mr. Hazlitt’s pages; but wherever this is the case, his
-reasoning is for the most part incorrect.’ This is a curious inference.
-‘This faint semblance of connected thinking,’ is, it appears, when I
-maintain some opinion, which is ‘a sprout from some popular doctrine’;
-but if I push it a little farther than you were aware of, my reasoning
-becomes incorrect. Thus it has been a popular doctrine with some
-critics, (which yet you do not admit)—‘That the progress of science is
-unfavourable to the culture of the imagination. It is no doubt true,
-that the individual who devotes his labour to the investigation of
-abstract truth, must acquire habits of thought very different from those
-which the exercise of the fancy demands.’ You add in italics, ‘_the
-cause lies in the exclusive appropriation of his time to reasoning, and
-not in the logical accuracy with which he reasons_.’ Whenever I have any
-discovery to communicate, which I think you cannot comprehend, I will in
-future put it in italics, to make it equally profound and clear. It
-appears by you, that the incompatibility between the successful pursuit
-of different studies does not arise from anything incompatible in the
-studies themselves, but from the time devoted to each. The mind is
-equally incapacitated from passing from one to the other, whether they
-are the most opposite or the most alike. The dreams of alchemy, and the
-schemes of astrology, the traditional belief in the doctrine of ghosts
-and fairies, though made up almost entirely of imagination, self-will,
-superstition and romance, were not a jot more favourable to the caprices
-and fanciful exaggerations of poetry, either in the public mind, or in
-that of individuals, than the modern system which excludes (both by the
-logical accuracy with which it proceeds, and a constant appeal to
-demonstrable facts), every alloy of passion, and all exercise of the
-imagination. You should never put your thoughts in italics. If I were to
-attempt a character of verbal critics, I should be apt to say, that
-their habits of mind disqualify them for general reasoning or fair
-discussion: that they are furious about trifles, because they have
-nothing else to interest them; that they have no way of giving dignity
-to their insignificant discoveries, but by treating those who have
-missed them with contempt; that they are dogmatical and conceited, in
-proportion as they have little else to guide them in their quaint
-researches but caprice and accident; that the want of intellectual
-excitement gives birth to increasing personal irritability, and endless
-petty altercation. You, Sir, would make all this self-evident, by the
-help of italics, and say, that _the cause lies not in anything in the
-nature of verbal criticism, but the exclusive appropriation of their
-time to it_.
-
-You next run foul of my account of the pleasure derived from tragedy.
-You are afraid to understand what I say on any subject, and it is not
-therefore likely you should ever detect what is erroneous in it. I have
-shewn by a reference to facts, and to the authority of Mr. Burke (whom
-you would rather contradict than believe me) that the objects which are
-supposed to please only in fiction, please in reality; that ‘if there
-were known to be a public execution of some state criminal in the next
-street, the theatre would soon be empty’—that therefore the pleasure
-derived from tragedy is not anything peculiar to it, as poetry or
-fiction; but has its ground in the common love of strong excitement. You
-say, I have misstated the fact, to give a false view of the question,
-which, according to you, is ‘why that which is painful in itself,
-pleases in works of fiction.’ I answer, I have shewn that this is not a
-fair statement of the question, by stating the fact, that what is
-painful in itself, pleases not the sufferer indeed, but the spectator,
-in reality as well as in works of fiction. The common proverb proves
-it—‘What is sport to one, is death to another.’
-
-You observe, that ‘Some lines I have quoted from Chaucer, are very
-pleasing—
-
- ——“Emelie that fayrer was to sene
- Than is the lilie upon his stalke grene,
- And fresher than the May with floures newe:
- For with the rose-colour strove hire hewe;
- I n’ot which was the finer of hem too.”
-
-‘But surely the beauty does not lie in the last line, though it is with
-this that Mr. Hazlitt is chiefly struck. “This scrupulousness” he
-observes, “about the literal preference, as if some question of matter
-of fact were at issue, is remarkable.”’
-
-That is, I am not chiefly struck with the beauty of the last line, but
-with its peculiarity as characteristic of Chaucer. The beauty of the
-former lines might be in Spenser: the scrupulous exactness of the latter
-could be found nowhere but in Chaucer. I had said just before, that this
-poet ‘introduces a sentiment or a simile, as if it were given in upon
-evidence.’ I bring this simile as an instance in point, and you say I
-have not brought it to prove something else.
-
-You charge me with misrepresenting Longinus, and prove that I have not.
-The word ἐναγώνιον signifies not as you are pleased to paraphrase it
-‘vehemently energetic,’ but simply ‘full of contests.’ Must the Greek
-language be new-fangled, to prove that I am ignorant of it?
-
-The only mistake you are able to point out, is a slip of the pen, which
-you will find to have been corrected long ago in the second
-edition.—Your pretending to say that Dr. Johnson was an admirer of
-Milton’s blank verse, is not a slip of the pen—you know he was not.
-There is as little sincerity in your concluding paragraph. You would
-ascribe what little appearance of thought there is in my writings to a
-confusion of images, and what appearance there is of imagination to a
-gaudy phraseology. If I had neither words nor ideas, I should be a
-profound philosopher and critic. How fond you are of reducing every one
-else to your own standard of excellence!
-
-I have done what I promised. You complain of the difficulty of
-remembering what I write; possibly this Letter will prove an exception.
-There is a train of thought in your own mind, which will connect the
-links together: and before you again undertake to run down a writer for
-no other reason, than that he is of an opposite party to yourself, you
-will perhaps recollect that your wilful artifices and shallow cunning,
-though they pass undetected, will hardly screen you from your own
-contempt, nor, when once exposed, will the gratitude of your employers
-save you from public scorn.
-
-Your conduct to me is no new thing: it is part of a system which has
-been regularly followed up for many years. Mr. Coleridge, in his
-Literary Life, has the following passage to shew the treatment which he
-and his friends received from your predecessor, the editor of the
-Anti-Jacobin Review.—‘I subjoin part of a note from the Beauties of the
-Anti-Jacobin, in which having previously informed the public that I had
-been dishonoured at Cambridge for preaching Deism, at a time when for my
-youthful ardour in defence of Christianity I was decried as a bigot by
-the proselytes of French philosophy, the writer concludes with these
-words—“_Since this time he has left his native country, commenced
-citizen of the world, left his poor children fatherless, and his wife
-destitute. Ex hoc disce his friends, Lamb and Southey._” With severest
-truth,’ continues Mr. Coleridge, ‘it may be asserted that it would not
-be easy to select two men more exemplary in their domestic affections
-than those whose names were thus printed at full length, as in the same
-rank of morals with a denounced infidel and fugitive, who had left his
-children fatherless, and his wife destitute! _Is it surprising that many
-good men remained longer than perhaps they otherwise would have done,
-adverse to a party which encouraged and openly rewarded the authors of
-such atrocious calumnies?_’
-
-With me, I confess, the wonder does not lie there:—all I am surprised at
-is, that the objects of these atrocious calumnies were ever reconciled
-to the authors of them and their patrons. Doubtless, they had powerful
-arts of conversion in their hands, who could with impunity and in
-triumph take away by atrocious calumnies the characters of all who
-disdained to be their tools; and rewarded with honours, places, and
-pensions all those who were. It is in this manner, Sir, that some of my
-old friends have become your new allies and associates.—They have
-changed sides, not I; and the proof that I have been true to the
-original ground of quarrel is, that I have you against me. Your
-consistency is the undeniable pledge of their tergiversation. The
-instinct of self-interest and meanness of servility are infallible and
-safe; it is speculative enthusiasm and disinterested love of public
-good, that being the highest strain of humanity, are apt to falter, and
-‘dying, make a swan-like end.’ This tendency to change was, in the case
-of our poetical reformists, precipitated by another cause. The spirit of
-poetry is, as I believe, favourable to liberty and humanity, but not
-when its aid is most wanted, in encountering the shocks and
-disappointments of the world. Poetry may be described as having the
-range of the universe; it traverses the empyrean, and looks down on
-nature from a higher sphere. When it lights upon the earth, it loses
-some of its dignity and its use. Its strength is in its wings; its
-element is the air. Standing on its feet, jostling with the crowd, it is
-liable to be overthrown, trampled on, and defaced; for its wings are of
-a dazzling brightness, ‘sky-tinctured,’ and the least soil upon them
-shews to disadvantage. Sullied, degraded as I have seen it, I shall not
-here insult over it, but leave it to Time to take out the stains, seeing
-it is a thing immortal as itself. ‘Being so majestical, I should do it
-wrong to offer it but the shew of violence.’—The reason why I have not
-changed my principles with some of the persons here alluded to, is, that
-I had a natural inveteracy of understanding which did not bend to
-fortune or circumstances. I was not a poet, but a metaphysician; and I
-suspect that the conviction of an abstract principle is alone a match
-for the prejudices of absolute power. The love of truth is the best
-foundation for the love of liberty. In this sense, I might have
-repeated—
-
- ‘Love is not love that alteration finds:
- Oh! no, it is an everfixed mark,
- That looks on tempests and is never shaken.’
-
-Besides, I had another reason. I owed something to truth, for she had
-done something for me. Early in life I had made (what I thought) a
-metaphysical discovery; and after that, it was too late to think of
-retracting. My pride forbad it: my understanding revolted at it. I could
-not do better than go on as I had begun. I too, worshipped at no
-unhallowed shrine, and served in no mean presence. I had laid my hand on
-the ark, and could not turn back! I have been called ‘a writer of
-third-rate books.’ For myself, there is no work of mine which I should
-rate so high, except one, which I dare say you never heard of—An Essay
-on the Principles of Human Action. I do not think the worse of it on
-that account; nor though you might not be able to understand it, could
-you attribute this to the gaudiness of the phraseology, nor the want of
-thought. I will here, Sir, explain the nature of the argument as clearly
-and in as few words as I can.
-
-The object of that Essay (and I have written this Letter partly to
-introduce it through you to the notice of the reader) is to leave free
-play to the social affections, and to the cultivation of the more
-disinterested and generous principles of our nature, by removing a
-stumbling-block which has been thrown in their way, and which turns the
-very idea of virtue or humanity into a fable, viz. the metaphysical
-doctrine of the innate and necessary selfishness of the human mind. Do
-you understand so far? The question I propose to examine is not the
-practical question, how far man is more or less selfish or social in the
-actual sum-total of his habits and affections, nor the moral or
-political question, to what degree of perfection he can be advanced
-still further in the one, or weaned from the other; but my intention is
-to state and answer the previous question, whether there is, as it has
-been contended, a total incapacity and physical impossibility in the
-human mind, of feeling an interest in anything beyond itself, so that
-both the common feelings of compassion, natural affection, friendship,
-etc. and the more refined and abstracted ones of the love of justice, of
-country, or of kind, are, and must be a delusion, believed in only by
-fools, and turned to their advantage by knaves. This doctrine which has
-been sedulously and confidently maintained by the French and English
-metaphysicians of the two last centuries, by Hobbes, Mandeville,
-Rochefoucault, Helvetius and others, and is a principal corner-stone of
-what is called the modern philosophy, I think tends to, and has done a
-great deal of mischief, and I believe I have found out a view of the
-subject, which gets rid of it unanswerably and for ever, in manner and
-form following. I conceive, that to establish the doctrine of exclusive
-and absolute selfishness on a metaphysical basis, that is to say, on the
-original and impassable distinction of the faculties of the human mind,
-it is necessary to make it appear, that there is some peculiar and
-abstracted principle which gives it an immediate, mechanical, and
-irresistible interest in whatever relates to itself, and which by the
-same rule shuts out and is a bar to the very possibility of our feeling
-not an equal, but any kind or degree of interest whatever, at any moment
-of our lives, in the history and fate of others. This is so far from
-being true, that the contrary is demonstrable. Thus, Sir, My
-self-interest in anything signifies (by the statement) the particular
-manner in which whatever relates to myself affects me, so as to create
-an anxiety about it, and be a motive to action. Now the same word,
-_self_, is indifferently applied to the whole of my being, past,
-present, and to come; and it is supposed from the use of language and
-the habitual association of ideas, that this self is _one thing_ as well
-as one word, and my interest in it all along the same necessary,
-identical interest. That a man must love himself as such, seems a
-self-evident and simple proposition. The idea appears like an absolute
-truth, and resists every attempt at analysis, like an element in nature.
-Some persons, who formerly took the pains to read this work, imagined
-(do not be alarmed, Sir!) that I wanted to argue them out of their own
-existence, merely because I endeavoured to define the nature and meaning
-of this word, self; to take in pieces, by metaphysical aid, this fine
-illusion of the brain and forgery of language, and to shew what there is
-real, and what false in it. The word denotes, by common consent, three
-different selves, my past, my present, and my future self. Now it is
-taken for granted by some, and insisted upon by others, that I must have
-the same unavoidable interest in all these, because they are all equally
-myself. But that is impossible; for in truth my personal identity is
-founded only on my personal consciousness, and that does not extend
-beyond the present moment.—It must be maintained, on the other side of
-the question, that my past, my present, and my future self are
-inseparably linked together, equally identified by an intimate communion
-of transferable thoughts and feelings in one metaphysical principle of
-self-interest, before they can be equally myself, the same identical
-thing, to any purpose of sentiment or for any motive of action. It will
-easily be seen how far this is the case, and how far it is not. I have a
-peculiar, exclusive self-interest or sympathy (never mind the word,
-Sir,) with my present self, by means of sensation (or consciousness),
-and with my past self, by means of memory, which I have not, and cannot
-have with the past or present feelings or interests of others; for this
-reason that these faculties are exclusive, peculiar, and confined to
-myself. But I have no exclusive, or peculiar, or independent faculty,
-like sensation or memory, giving me the same absolute, unavoidable,
-instinctive interest in my own future sensations, and none at all in
-those of others. This ideal self is then nominally the same, but
-strictly different; composed of distinct and unequal parts; bound
-together by laws and principles which have no parity of relation to each
-other. By shewing how personal identity produces self-interest as far as
-it goes, we shall see exactly when and how it ceases.—If I touch a
-burning coal, this gives me a present sensation differing in kind and
-degree from any impression I can receive from the same sensation being
-inflicted on another: there is no communication between another’s nerves
-and my brain producing a correspondent jar and magnetic sympathy of
-frame. Again, if I have suffered a pain of this sort in time past, this
-leaves traces in my mind, by my continued identity with myself, or by
-means of memory, of a kind totally distinct from any conception I can
-form of the same pain inflicted a year ago (for instance) on another.
-These two important faculties then give me an appropriate and exclusive
-interest only in what happens or has happened to myself. So far as the
-operation of these two faculties goes, I am strictly a selfish being, I
-am necessarily cut off from all knowledge of or sympathy with the
-feelings of any one but myself. But if I am to undergo a certain pain at
-a future time, the next year or the next moment, however near or remote,
-I have no faculty impressing this feeling intuitively and with
-mechanical force and certainty on my mind beforehand, as my present or
-past impressions are stamped upon it by means of sensation and memory. I
-have no principle of thought or sentiment in the original conformation
-of my mind, projecting me forward into my future being, giving me a
-present unavoidable consciousness of it, and removed from all cognisance
-of what happens to others; I have no faculty identifying my future
-interests inseparably with my present feelings, and therefore I have no
-exclusive, mechanical and proper self-interest in them, merely because
-they are mine: for that which is _mine_, is that which touches me by
-secret springs, and in a way in which what relates to others can take no
-hold of me. The only faculty by which I can anticipate what is to befal
-myself in future, is the same common and disposable faculty in kind and
-in mode of operation, by which I can, I do, and must anticipate in
-degree, and more or less according to circumstances, the feelings and
-thoughts of others, and take a proportionable interest in them, viz. the
-Imagination. To suppose that there is a principle of self-interest in
-the mind, without a faculty of self-interest, is an absurdity and a
-contradiction. This idea of an abstract, exclusive, metaphysical
-self-interest in my own being generally, is taken (by a gross and blind
-prejudice) from the manner in which the faculties of sensation and
-memory affect me, and applied to a part of my being, where I have no
-such interest in myself, because I have no such faculty giving it me.
-What proves that there is no mechanical sympathy identifying my future
-with my present being, is, that I am for the most part, indifferent to,
-ignorant of what is to happen to myself hereafter. There is no
-presentiment in the case. If the house is about to fall on my head, this
-occasions no uneasiness to my self-love, unless there are circumstances
-to alarm my imagination beforehand. To suppose, that besides the ideal
-or rational interest I have in the event, I have another _real_
-metaphysical interest in it, without object or consciousness, is as if I
-should say, that I have a particular interest in the past, without
-remembering it, or in the present without feeling it.—But the future is
-the only subject of action, that is, of a practical or rational interest
-at all, either of self-love or benevolence. All voluntary action, that
-is, all action undertaken with a view to produce a certain event or the
-contrary, must relate to the future. The primary, essential motive of
-the volition of anything must be the _idea_ of that thing, and the idea
-solely. For the thing itself, which is the object of desire and pursuit,
-is by the supposition a nonentity. It is _willed_ for that very reason,
-that it is supposed not to exist. If it did exist, or had existed, it
-would be absurd to will it to exist or not to exist; and as a thing
-which does not exist, but which we will to be or not to be, it is a mere
-fiction of the mind, and can exert no power over the thoughts, nor
-influence the will or the affections in any way, except through the
-imagination. The future, whether as it relates to myself or others,
-exists only in the mind; and in the mind, not by memory, not by
-sensation, which are exclusive and selfish faculties, but by the
-imagination, which is not a limited, narrow faculty, but common,
-discursive, and social. If my sympathy with others is not a sensible
-substantial mechanical interest, neither is my self-interest anything
-but an imaginary and ideal one, I am bound to my future interest only by
-the same fine links of fancy and reason, which give that of others a
-hold on my affections. As a voluntary agent, I am necessarily, and in
-the first instance, that is, in the metaphysical sense of the question,
-a disinterested one. I could not love myself, if I were not so formed,
-as to be capable of loving others. I have no solid, material, gross,
-actual self-interest in my own future welfare, and I therefore can only
-have the same airy, notional, hypothetical interest in it, which I must
-have in kind, though not in degree, in the pleasures and pains of
-others, which I get at the knowledge of and sympathise with in the same
-way. There is then no exclusive ground of self-interest, incompatible
-with sympathy, and rendering it a chimera; self-love and sympathy both
-rest on the same general ground of reason, of imagination, and of common
-sense.—It may be said, that my own future interests have a reality
-beyond the mere idea. So have the interests of others, and the only
-question is, whether the sympathy, the motive to action, is not equally
-imaginary in both cases. It may be said, that I shall become my future
-self, but that is no reason why I should take a particular interest in
-it till I do. If a pin pricks me in any part of my body, I am instantly
-apprised of it, and feel an interest in removing it; but my future self
-does not find any means of apprising me of its sensations, in which I
-can feel no interest, except from previous apprehension. Lastly, it may
-be said that I do feel an interest in myself and my future welfare,
-which I do not, and cannot feel in that of others. This I grant; but
-that does not prove a metaphysical antecedent self-interest, precluding
-the possibility of all interest in others, (for the social affections
-are as much a matter of fact, as the influence of self-love) but a
-practical self-interest, arising out of habit and circumstances, and
-more or less consistent with other disinterested and humane feelings,
-according to habit, opinion, and circumstances. I love myself better
-than my neighbour, for the same reason (and for no other) that I love my
-child better than a stranger’s—from having my thoughts more fixed upon
-its welfare, my time more taken up in providing for it, and from my
-knowing better by experience, what its wants and wishes are. People have
-accounted for natural affection as an innate idea, as they have for
-self-love. According to the metaphysical doctrine of selfishness, my own
-child or a stranger’s, and every one else, are equally and perfectly
-indifferent to me, as much as if they were mere machines. As to a
-paramount universal abstract notion of personal identity, impelling and
-overruling all my actions, thoughts, feelings, etc. to one sole object,
-and centre of self-interest, there is no such thing in nature. It
-requires almost as much pains and discipline, to make us attentive to
-our own real and permanent happiness, as to that of others. Is it not
-the constant theme of moralists and divines, that man is the sport of
-impulse, and the creature of habit? I would ask, whether the
-convivialist is deterred from indulging in his love of the bottle, by
-any consideration of the ruin of his health or business? Is the
-debauchee restrained in the career of his passions, any more by
-reflecting on the disgrace or probable diseases he is bringing on
-himself, than on the injury he does to others? It would be as hard a
-task to make the spendthrift prudent, as the miser generous. Man is
-governed by his passions, and not by his interest.—The selfish theory is
-founded on mixing up vulgar prejudices, and scholastic distinctions; and
-by being insisted on, tends to debase the mind, and not at all promote
-the cause of truth.
-
-I do not think I should illustrate the foregoing reasoning so well by
-anything I could add on the subject, as by relating the manner in which
-it first struck me. I remember I had been reading a speech which
-Mirabaud (the author of the work, called the System of Nature) has put
-into the mouth of a supposed infidel at the day of Judgment; and was
-afterwards led on by some means or other, to consider the question,
-whether it could properly be said to be an act of virtue in any one to
-sacrifice his own final happiness to that of any other person, or number
-of persons, if it were possible for the one ever to be made the price of
-the other. Suppose it be my own case—that it were in my power to save
-twenty other persons, by voluntarily consenting to suffer for them, why
-should I not do a generous thing, and never trouble myself about what
-might be the consequences to myself thousands of years hence? Now the
-reason, I thought, why a man should prefer his own future welfare to
-that of others, was, that he has a necessary, or abstract interest in
-the one, which he cannot have in the other, and this again is the
-consequence of his being always the same individual, of his continued
-identity with himself. The distinction is this, that however insensible
-I may be to my own interest at any future period, yet when the time
-comes, I shall feel very differently about it. I shall then judge of it
-from the actual impression of the object, that is, truly and certainly;
-and as I shall still be conscious of my past feelings, and shall
-bitterly repent my own folly and insensibility, I ought, as a rational
-agent, to be determined now by what I shall then wish I had done, when I
-shall feel the consequences of my actions most deeply and sensibly. It
-is this continued consciousness of my own feelings which gives me an
-immediate interest in whatever relates to my future welfare, and makes
-me at all times accountable to myself for my own conduct. As therefore
-this consciousness will be renewed in me after death, if I exist again
-at all—But stop——As I must be conscious of my past feelings to be
-myself, and as this conscious being will be myself, how, if that
-consciousness should be transferred to some other being? How am I to
-know that I am not imposed upon by a false claim of identity? But that
-is impossible, because I shall have no other self than that which arises
-from this very consciousness. Why then, if so, this self may be
-multiplied in as many different beings as the Deity may think proper to
-endue with the same consciousness, which, if it can be renewed by an act
-of omnipotence in any one instance, may clearly be so in a hundred
-others. Am I to regard all these as equally myself? Am I equally
-interested in the fate of all? Or if I must fix upon some one of them in
-particular as my representative and other self, how am I to be
-determined in my choice?——Here then I saw an end to my speculations
-about absolute self-interest and personal identity. I saw plainly, that
-the consciousness of my own feelings, which is made the foundation of my
-continued interest in them, could not extend to what had never been, and
-might never be, that my identity with myself must be confined to the
-connection between my past and present being, that with respect to my
-future feelings and interests they could have no communication with, or
-influence over my present feelings and interests, merely because they
-were future, that I shall be hereafter affected by the recollection of
-my former feelings and actions, and my remorse be equally heightened by
-reflecting on my past folly, and late-earned wisdom, whether I am really
-the same thinking being, or have only the same consciousness renewed in
-me; but that to suppose that this remorse can re-act in the reverse
-order on my present feelings, or create an immediate interest in my
-future feelings before it exists, is an express contradiction. For, how
-can this pretended unity of consciousness which is only reflected from
-the past, which makes me so little acquainted with the future, that I
-cannot even tell for a moment how long it will be continued, whether it
-will be entirely interrupted by, or renewed in me after death, and which
-might be multiplied in I don’t know how many different beings, and
-prolonged by complicated sufferings, without my being any the wiser for
-it; how, I ask, can a principle of this sort transfuse my present into
-my future being, and make me as much a participator in what does not at
-all affect me as if it were actually impressed upon my senses? I cannot,
-therefore, have a principle of active self-interest arising out of the
-connexion between my future and present being, for no such connexion
-exists or is possible. I am what I am in spite of the future. My
-feelings, actions, and interests are determined by causes already
-existing and acting, and cannot depend on anything else, without a
-complete transposition of the order in which effects follow one another
-in nature.
-
-In this manner, Sir, may a man learn to distinguish the limits which
-circumscribe his identity with himself, and the frail tenure on which he
-holds his fleeting existence. Here indeed, ‘on this bank and shoal of
-time,’ we give ourselves credit for a few years, and so far make sure of
-our continued identity—as far as we can see the horizon before us, while
-the same busy scene exists, while the same objects, passions, and
-pursuits engross our attention, we seem to grasp the realities of
-things; they are incorporated with our imagination and take hold of our
-affections, and we cannot doubt of our interest in them. Farther than
-this, we do not go with the same confidence; the indistinctness of
-another state of being takes away its reality, and we lose the abstract
-idea of self for want of objects to attach it to. But the reasoning is
-the same in both cases. The next year, the next hour, the next moment is
-but a creation of the mind; in all that we hope or fear, love or hate,
-in all that is nearest and dearest to us, we but mistake the strength of
-illusion for certainty, and follow the mimic shews of things and catch
-at a shadow and live in a waking dream. Everything before us exists in
-an ideal world. The future is a blank and dreary void, like sleep or
-death, till the imagination brooding over it with wings outspread,
-impregnates it with life and motion. The forms and colours it assumes
-are but the pictures reflected on the eye of fancy, the unreal mockeries
-of future events. The solid fabric of time and nature moves on, but the
-future always flies before it. The present moment stands on the brink of
-nothing. We cannot pass the dread abyss, or make a broad and beaten way
-over it, or construct a real interest in it, or identify ourselves with
-what is not, or have a being, sense, and motion, where there are none.
-Our interest in the future, our identity with it, cannot be substantial;
-that self which we project before us into it is like a shadow in the
-water, a bubble of the brain. In becoming the blind and servile drudges
-of self-interest, we bow down before an idol of our own making, and are
-spell-bound by a name. Those objects to which we are most attached, make
-no part of our present sensations or real existence; they are fashioned
-out of nothing, and rivetted to our self-love by the force of a
-reasoning imagination, (the privilege of our intellectual nature)—and it
-is the same faculty that carries us out of ourselves as well as beyond
-the present moment, that pictures the thoughts, passions and feelings of
-others to us, and interests us in them, that clothes the whole possible
-world with a borrowed reality, that breathes into all other forms the
-breath of life, and endows our sympathies with vital warmth, and
-diffuses the soul of morality through all the relations and sentiments
-of our social being.
-
-Such, Sir, is the metaphysical discovery of which I spoke; and which I
-made many years ago. From that time I felt a certain weight and
-tightness about my heart taken off, and cheerful and confident thoughts
-springing up in the place of anxious fears and sad forebodings. The
-plant I had sown and watered with my tears, grew under my eye; and the
-air about it was wholesome and pleasant. For this cause it is, that I
-have gone on little discomposed by other things, by good or adverse
-fortune, by good or ill report, more hurt by public disappointments than
-my own, and not thrown into the hot or cold fits of a tertian ague; as
-the Edinburgh or Quarterly Review damps or raises the opinion of the
-town in my favour. I have some love of fame, of the fame of a Pascal, a
-Leibnitz, or a Berkeley (none at all of popularity) and would rather
-that a single inquirer after truth should pronounce my name, after I am
-dead, with the same feelings that I have thought of theirs, than be
-puffed in all the newspapers, and praised in all the reviews, while I am
-living. I myself have been a thinker; and I cannot but believe that
-there are and will be others, like me. If the few and scattered sparks
-of truth, which I have been at so much pains to collect, should still be
-kept alive in the minds of such persons, and not entirely die with me, I
-shall be satisfied.
-
- I am, Sir,
- Yours, etc.
- WILLIAM HAZLITT.
-
-
- End of A LETTER TO WILLIAM GIFFORD.
-
------
-
-Footnote 72:
-
- See the Examiner, Feb. 9.
-
-Footnote 73:
-
- ‘I hated my profession’ (the business of a shoemaker, to which he was
- bound prentice) ‘with a perfect hatred.’ See _Mr. Gifford’s Life of
- Himself prefixed to his Juvenal_. He seems to have liked few things
- else better from that day to this. He tells us in the same work
- (though this is hardly what I should call being ‘a good hater’) that
- he did not much like his father, and was not sorry when he died. This
- candid and amiable personage always overflowed with ‘the milk of human
- kindness.’
-
-Footnote 74:
-
- ‘Undoubtedly the translator of Juvenal.’
-
-Footnote 75:
-
- ‘It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle, than for
- a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven.’ Mr. Gifford here seems to
- exclude his band of gentlemen-pensioners, whom he pays on earth, from
- bursting with obscure worth into the realms of day. It is thus that
- Jacobin sentiments sprout from the commonest sympathy, and are even
- unavoidable in a government critic, when the common claims of humanity
- touch his pity or his self-love.
-
-Footnote 76:
-
- A quotation of Mr. Gifford’s from Shakespeare. Yet he reproaches me
- with quoting from Shakespeare.
-
-Footnote 77:
-
- To Apollo.
-
-Footnote 78:
-
- Humanity stands as little in this author’s way as truth when his
- object is to please. It was in the same spirit of unmanly adulation
- that he struck at Mrs. Robinson’s lameness and ‘her crutches,’ with a
- hand, that ought to have been withered in the attempt by the lightning
- of public indignation and universal scorn. Mr. Sheridan once spoke of
- certain politicians in his day who ‘skulked behind the throne, and
- made use of the sceptre as a conductor to carry off the lightning of
- national indignation which threatened to consume them.’ There are
- certain small critics and poetasters who have always been trying to do
- the same thing.
-
-Footnote 79:
-
- This word is not very choice English: the character is not English.
-
-Footnote 80:
-
- See the Mæviad, l. 365, etc.:—
-
- ‘I too, whose voice no claims _but truth’s e’er mov’d_,
- Who long have seen thy merits, long have lov’d;
- Yet lov’d in silence, lest the rout should say,
- Too partial friendship tun’d the applausive lay;
- Now, now, that all conspire thy name to raise,
- May join the shout of unsuspected praise.’
-
-Footnote 81:
-
- ‘To be honest as this world goes, is to be one man picked out of ten
- thousand.’—SHAKSPEARE.
-
-Footnote 82:
-
- This character, (which has not been relished,) appeared originally in
- a small pamphlet in 1806, called Free Thoughts on Public Affairs, with
- a note acknowledging my obligations for the leading ideas to an
- article of Mr. Coleridge’s, in the Morning Post, Feb. 1800.
-
-Footnote 83:
-
- This extreme tenderness, it is to be observed, is felt by a person who
- in his Life of Ben Jonson, hopes that God will forgive Shakspeare for
- having written his plays!
-
-Footnote 84:
-
- It was a phrase, (I have understood,) common in this gentleman’s
- mouth, that Robespierre, by destroying the lives of thousands, saved
- the lives of millions. Or, as Mr. Wordsworth has lately expressed the
- same thought with a different application, ‘Carnage is the daughter of
- humanity.’
-
-Footnote 85:
-
- You have spelt it wrong (Marocchius), on purpose for what I know.
-
-Footnote 86:
-
- Quoted from the _Edinburgh Review_, No. 56.
-
-
-
-
- NOTES
-
-
- THE ROUND TABLE
-
-
- ON THE LOVE OF LIFE
-
-This essay formed No. 3 of the Round Table series, the first two having
-been contributed by Leigh Hunt. To numbers 2, 3, 4 the following motto
-was prefixed: ‘Sociali fœdere mensa. _Milton._ A Table in a social
-compact joined.’
-
- PAGE
-
- 1. _That sage._ Hazlitt perhaps refers to Bacon’s lines—
-
- ‘What then remains, but that we still should cry
- For being born, or being born, to die?’
-
- which are taken from an epigram in the Greek Anthology.
-
- 2. ‘_The school-boy_,’ says _Addison._ See _The Spectator_, No. 93.
-
- ‘_Hope and fantastic expectations_,’ _etc._ Jeremy Taylor’s _Holy
- Dying_, Chap. i. § 3, par. 4.
-
- ‘_An ounce of sweet_,’ _etc._ ‘A dram of sweete is worth a pound
- of sowre.’ _The Faerie Queene_, Book I. Canto iii. 30. This
- line formed the motto of Leigh Hunt’s _Indicator_.
-
- 3. ‘_And that must end us_,’ _etc._ _Paradise Lost_, II. 145–151. In
- _The Examiner_ Hazlitt publishes the following passage as a
- note to this quotation: ‘Many persons have wondered how
- Bonaparte was able to survive the shock of that tremendous
- height of power from which he fell. But it was that very height
- which still rivetted his backward gaze, and made it impossible
- for him to take his eye from it, more than from a hideous
- spectre. The sun of Austerlitz still rose upon his imagination,
- and could not set. The huge fabric of glory which he had
- raised, still “mocked his eyes with air.”[87] He who had felt
- his existence so intensely could not consent to lose it!’
-
- 4. ‘_Are made desperate_,’ _etc._ Wordsworth’s _Excursion_, Book VI.
- The following note is appended to this essay in _The Examiner_:
- ‘It is proper to notice that an extract from this article
- formerly appeared in another publication. A series of
- Criticisms on the principal English Poets will shortly be
- commenced, and till concluded, will appear alternately with the
- other subjects of the Round Table.’ The publication referred to
- was _The Morning Chronicle_ for September 4, 1813, where, under
- the heading ‘Common Places,’ the substance of the paragraph
- beginning ‘The love of life is, in general, the effect,’ and
- the following paragraph will be found. The plan for criticisms
- of the English Poets was not adhered to. Hazlitt shortly
- afterwards (1818) delivered a course of Lectures on the English
- Poets which was published in the same year.
-
-
- ON CLASSICAL EDUCATION
-
-This essay formed the greater part of No. 7 of the Round Table series.
-The first three paragraphs are from one of Hazlitt’s ‘Common Places’ in
-_The Morning Chronicle_, September 25, 1813.
-
- PAGE
-
- 4. ‘_A discipline of humanity._’ Bacon’s _Essays_, Of Marriage and
- Single Life.
-
- ‘_Still green with bays_,’ _etc._ Pope’s _Essay on Criticism_,
- 181–188.
-
- 5. _A celebrated political writer._ Probably Cobbett, of whom
- Hazlitt says in another place: ‘He is a self-taught man, and
- has the faults as well as excellences of that class of persons
- in their most striking and glaring excess.’ (_Table Talk_,
- Character of Cobbett.)
-
- 6. ‘_The world is too much with us_,’ _etc._ Misquoted from
- Wordsworth’s Sonnet.
-
- _Falstaff’s reasoning about honour._ See _1 Henry IV._ Act V.
- Scene 1.
-
- ‘_They that are whole_,’ _etc._ _St. Matthew_, ix. 12.
-
- In _The Examiner_ this essay concluded with the following
- passage: ‘We do not think a classical education proper for
- women. It may pervert their minds, but it cannot elevate them.
- It has been asked, Why a woman should not learn the dead
- languages as well as the modern ones? For this plain reason,
- that the one are still spoken, and have immediate associations
- connected with them, and the other not. A woman may have a
- lover who is a Frenchman, or an Italian, or a Spaniard; and it
- is well to be provided against every contingency in that way.
- But what possible interest can she feel in those old-fashioned
- persons, the Greeks and Romans, or in what was done two
- thousand years ago? A modern widow would doubtless prefer
- Signor Tramezzani[88] to Æneas, and Mr. Conway would be a
- formidable rival to Paris. No young lady in our days, in
- conceiving an idea of Apollo, can go a step beyond the image of
- her favourite poet: nor do we wonder that our old friend, the
- Prince Regent, passes for a perfect Adonis in the circles of
- beauty and fashion. Women in general have no ideas, except
- personal ones. They are mere egotists. They have no passion for
- truth, nor any love of what is purely ideal. They hate to
- think, and they hate every one who seems to think of anything
- but themselves. Everything is to them a perfect nonentity which
- does not touch their senses, their vanity, or their interest.
- Their poetry, their criticism, their politics, their morality,
- and their divinity, are downright affectation. That line in
- Milton is very striking—
-
- “He for God only, she for God in him.”[89]
-
- Such is the order of nature and providence; and we should be
- sorry to see any fantastic improvements on it. Women are what
- they were meant to be; and we wish for no alteration in
- their bodies or their minds. They are the creatures of
- the circumstances in which they are placed, of sense, of
- sympathy and habit. They are exquisitely susceptible of the
- passive impressions of things: but to form an idea of pure
- understanding or imagination, to feel an interest in _the true_
- and _the good_ beyond themselves, requires an effort of which
- they are incapable. They want principle, except that which
- consists in an adherence to established custom; and this is the
- reason of the severe laws which have been set up as a barrier
- against every infringement of decorum and propriety in women.
- It has been observed by an ingenious writer of the present day,
- that women want imagination. This requires explanation. They
- have less of that imagination which depends on intensity of
- passion, on the accumulation of ideas and feelings round one
- object, on bringing all nature and all art to bear on a
- particular purpose, on continuity and comprehension of mind;
- but for the same reason, they have more fancy, that is greater
- flexibility of mind, and can more readily vary and separate
- their ideas at pleasure. The reason of that greater presence of
- mind which has been remarked in women is, that they are less in
- the habit of speculating on what is best to be done, and the
- first suggestion is decisive. The writer of this article
- confesses that he never met with any woman who could reason,
- and with but one reasonable woman. There is no instance of a
- woman having been a great mathematician or metaphysician or
- poet or painter: but they can dance and sing and act and write
- novels and fall in love, which last quality alone makes more
- than angels of them. Women are no judges of the characters of
- men, except _as men_. They have no real respect for men, or
- they never respect them for those qualities, for which they are
- respected by men. They in fact regard all such qualities as
- interfering with their own pretensions, and creating a
- jurisdiction different from their own. Women naturally wish to
- have their favourites all to themselves, and flatter their
- weaknesses to make them more dependent on their own good
- opinion, which, they think, is all that they want. We have,
- indeed, seen instances of men, equally respectable and amiable,
- equally admired by the women and esteemed by the men, but who
- have been ruined by an excess of virtues and accomplishments.’
- Leigh Hunt replied to these remarks in the following number of
- the Round Table series (February 19, 1815), where he makes
- interesting reference to Hazlitt’s appearance and powers.
-
-
- ON THE TATLER
-
-This essay formed No. 10 of the Round Table series. The substance of it
-was repeated by Hazlitt in his volume of _Lectures on the English Comic
-Writers_ (1819). (See the Lecture on ‘The Periodical Essayists.’)
-
- PAGE
-
- 7. ‘_The disastrous strokes which his youth suffered._’ ‘Some
- distressful stroke that my youth suffered.’ _Othello_, Act I.
- Scene 3.
-
- _He dwells with a secret satisfaction._ _The Tatler_, No. 107.
-
- _The club at the ‘Trumpet.’_ _The Tatler_, No. 132.
-
- _The cavalcade of the justice_, _etc._ _The Tatler_, No. 86.
-
- _The upholsterer and his companions._ See _The Tatler_, Nos. 155,
- 160, and 178.
-
- _A burlesque copy of verses._ _The Tatler_, No. 238. The verses
- are by Swift.
-
- 8. _Betterton and Mrs. Oldfield._ See p. 157. Betterton is
- frequently mentioned in _The Tatler_. See especially No. 167.
-
- _Mr. Penkethman and Mr. Bullock._ See _The Tatler_, No. 88, and
- p. 157 of this volume.
-
- ‘_The first sprightly runnings._’ Dryden’s _Aurengzebe_, Act IV.
- Scene 1.
-
- 9. _The Court of Honour._ Addison, in _The Tatler_, No. 250, created
- the Court of Honour. He and Steele together wrote the later
- papers (Nos. 253, 256, 259, 262, 265) in which the proceedings
- of the Court are recorded.
-
- _The Personification of Musical Instruments._ _The Spectator_,
- Nos. 153 and 157.
-
- Note. This note is by Leigh Hunt. The authorship of the anonymous
- paper (_The Spectator_, No. 95) is uncertain.
-
- _The account of the two sisters._ _The Tatler_, No. 151.
-
- _The married lady._ _The Tatler_, No. 104.
-
- 9. _The lover and his mistress._ _The Tatler_, No. 94.
-
- _The bridegroom._ _The Tatler_, No. 82.
-
- _Mr. Eustace and his wife._ _The Tatler_, No. 172.
-
- _The fine dream._ _The Tatler_, No. 117.
-
- _Mandeville’s sarcasm._ Bernard Mandeville (_d._ 1733), author of
- _The Fable of the Bees_.
-
- _Westminster Abbey._ _The Spectator_, No. 26.
-
- _Royal Exchange._ _The Spectator_, No. 69.
-
- _The best criticism._ _The Spectator_, No. 226.
-
- 10. Note. _An original copy of the ‘Tatler.’_ The octavo edition of
- 1710–11.
-
-
- ON MODERN COMEDY
-
-This essay did not form one of the Round Table series, but was published
-in _The Examiner_ for August 20, 1815, under the heading ‘Theatrical
-Examiner.’ It was substantially repeated in the _Lectures on the English
-Comic Writers_ (Lecture VIII., ‘on the Comic Writers of the Last
-Century’), and was republished _verbatim_ in the posthumous volume
-entitled _Criticisms and Dramatic Essays on the English Stage_ (1851).
-The essay is practically a reprint of the first of two letters which
-Hazlitt wrote to _The Morning Chronicle_ (September 25 and October 15,
-1813). The second of these letters has not been republished.
-
- PAGE
-
- 10. ‘_Where it must live, or have no life at all._’ _Othello_, Act.
- II. Scene 4.
-
- 11. ‘_See ourselves as others see us._’ Burns, ‘To a Louse.’
-
- _Wart._ He means Shadow. See _2 Henry IV._, Act III. Scene 2.
-
- 12. _Lovelace_, _etc._ Nearly all these characters are discussed in
- the _English Comic Writers_. Sparkish is in Wycherley’s
- _Country Wife_, Lord Foppington in Vanbrugh’s _Relapse_,
- Millamant in Congreve’s _Way of the World_, Sir Sampson Legend
- in Congreve’s _Love for Love_.
-
- _We cannot expect_, _etc._ This paragraph appeared originally in
- _The Morning Chronicle_, October 15, 1813.
-
- 13. ‘_That sevenfold fence._’ ‘The seven-fold shield of Ajax cannot
- keep the battery from my heart.’ _Antony and Cleopatra_, Act
- IV. Scene 14. This passage is taken by Hazlitt from his own
- _Reply to Malthus_ (1807).
-
- ‘_Mr. Smirk, you are a brisk man._’ Foote’s _Minor_, Act II.
-
- _Aristotle._ In the _Poetics_.
-
- ‘_Warm hearts of flesh and blood_,’ _etc._ Quoted, with omissions
- and variations, from a passage in Burke’s _Reflections on the
- Revolution in France_ (_Select Works_, ed. Payne, ii. 101).
-
- 14. ‘_Men’s minds are parcel of their fortunes._’ _Antony and
- Cleopatra_, Act III. Scene 13.
-
-
- ON MR. KEAN’S IAGO
-
-Republished with a few variations from _The Examiner_ of July 24, 1814.
-Hazlitt afterwards published the original article in _A View of the
-English Stage_ (1818), and borrowed from it in _Characters of
-Shakespear’s Plays_ (See _ante_, pp. 206–7).
-
- PAGE
-
- 14. _A contemporary critic._ This was Hazlitt himself who made this
- criticism of Kean in an article in _The Morning Chronicle_ (May
- 9, 1814), reprinted in _A View of the English Stage_.
-
- ‘_Hedged in with the divinity of kings._’ From _Hamlet_, Act IV.
- Scene 5.
-
- 15. _Play the dog_, _etc._ _3 Henry VI._, Act V. Scene 6.
-
- 16. ‘_His cue is villainous melancholy_,’ _etc._ _King Lear_, Act I.
- Scene 2.
-
-
- ON THE LOVE OF THE COUNTRY
-
-This essay was one of a series called Common-places (No. III.) and
-appeared in _The Examiner_ on November 27, 1814, before the Round Table
-series commenced. It was not, therefore, addressed, as it purports to
-be, ‘to the editor of the “Round Table.”’ The greater part of it was
-repeated in the _Lectures on the English Poets_ (1818) at the end of
-Lecture V. on Thomson and Cowper.
-
- PAGE
-
- 17. _Rousseau in his ‘Confessions.’_ Partie I. Livre III.
-
- 18. _The minstrel._ See Beattie’s _Minstrel_, Book I. st. 9.
-
- 20. ‘_A farewell sweet._’
-
- ‘If chance the radiant sun, with farewell sweet,
- Extend his evening beam,’ etc.
-
- _Paradise Lost_, II. 492.
-
- ‘_To me the meanest flower_,’ _etc._ Wordsworth’s Ode,
- _Intimations of Immortality_.
-
- ‘_Nature did ne’er betray_,’ _etc._ Wordsworth’s _Lines composed
- a few miles above Tintern Abbey_.
-
- 21. ‘_Or from the mountain’s sides._’ Collins’s _Ode to Evening_,
- stanzas 9 and 10.
-
-
- ON POSTHUMOUS FAME
-
-This essay is not one of the Round Table series. It appeared in _The
-Examiner_ on May 22, 1814.
-
- PAGE
-
- 22. ‘_Blessings be with them_’ _etc._ Wordsworth’s _Personal Talk_,
- stanza 4.
-
- ‘_Nor sometimes forget_,’ _etc._ _Paradise Lost_, III. 33 _et
- seq._
-
- Note. A part of the passage here referred to (from _The Reason of
- Church Government urged against Prelacy_) is quoted by Hazlitt
- in his _Lectures on the English Poets_ (on Shakspeare and
- Milton).
-
- 23. ‘_Famous poets’ wit._’ See _The Faerie Queene, Verses addressed
- by the author_, No. 2. ‘_Have not the poems of Homer_,’ _etc._
- _The Advancement of Learning_, First Book, VIII. 6.
-
- ‘_Because on Earth_,’ _etc._ See Dante’s _Inferno_, Canto iv. Cf.
- ‘On Fames eternall beadroll worthie to be fyled.’ _The Faerie
- Queene_, Book IV. Canto ii. st. 32.
-
- ‘_Every variety of untried being._’
-
- ‘Through what variety of untried being,
- Through what new scenes and changes must we pass!’
-
- Addison’s _Cato_, Act V. Scene 1.
-
- 24. Note. ‘_Oh! for my sake_,’ _etc._ Sonnet No. III. ‘_Desiring this
- man’s art_,’ _etc._ Sonnet No. 29.
-
-
- ON HOGARTH’S ‘MARRIAGE À LA MODE’
-
-This essay (from _The Examiner_, June 5, 1814) and the next one (June
-19, 1814) continuing the same subject, were (in substance) republished
-in the _English Comic Writers_ (see the Lecture VII. on the works of
-Hogarth) and also in _Sketches of the Principal Picture-Galleries in
-England_, _etc._ (1824).
-
- PAGE
-
- 25. _The late collection._ In 1814.
-
- ‘_Of amber-lidded snuff-box._’ Pope’s _Rape of the Lock_, IV.
- 123.
-
- 26. ‘_A person, and a smooth dispose_,’ _etc._ _Othello_, Act I.
- Scene 3.
-
- ‘_Vice loses half its evil in losing all its grossness._’ Burke’s
- _Reflections on the Revolution in France_ (_Select Works_, ed.
- Payne, ii. 89).
-
-
- THE SUBJECT CONTINUED
-
- 28. _What Fielding says._ See _Tom Jones_, Book IV. Chap. i.
-
- 30. ‘_All the mutually reflected charities._’ Burke’s _Reflections on
- the Revolution in France_ (_Select Works_, ed. Payne, ii. 40).
-
- ‘_Frequent and full_,’ _etc._ See _Paradise Lost_, III. 795–797.
-
- 31. Note. _The ‘Reflector.’_ For 1811. The essay is included in
- _Poems, Plays and Miscellaneous Essays of Charles Lamb_ (ed.
- Ainger).
-
-
- ON MILTON’S LYCIDAS
-
-No. 15 of the Round Table series.
-
- PAGE
-
- 31. ‘_At last he rose_,’ _etc._ _Lycidas_, 192–193.
-
- _Dr. Johnson._ See his Life of Milton (_Works_, Oxford ed., vii.
- 119).
-
- ‘_Most musical, most melancholy._’ _Il Penseroso_, l. 62.
-
- ‘_With eager thought warbling his Doric lay._’ _Lycidas_, l. 189.
-
- 32. ‘_Together both_,’ _etc._ _Lycidas_, ll. 25 _et seq._
-
- ‘_Oh fountain Arethuse_,’ _etc._ _Lycidas_, ll. 85 _et seq._
-
- 33. ‘_Like one that had been led astray_,’ _etc._ _Il Penseroso_, ll.
- 69–70.
-
- ‘_Next Camus_,’ _etc._ _Lycidas_, ll. 103 _et seq._
-
- _Has been found fault with._ By Dr. Johnson in his Life of Milton
- (_Works_, Oxford ed., vii. 120).
-
- _Camoens, who, in his ‘Lusiad.’_ See _The Lusiads_, Canto ii.
- stanzas 56 _et seq._
-
- 34. ‘_The muses in a ring_,’ _etc._ _Il Penseroso_, ll. 47–48.
-
- ‘_Have sight of Proteus_,’ _etc._ Wordsworth’s Sonnet, ‘The world
- is too much with us.’
-
- ‘_Return, Alphaeus_,’ _etc._ _Lycidas_, ll. 132 _et seq._
-
- 35. _Dr. Johnson._ Johnson does not seem to have been offended by the
- dolphins in particular.
-
- _The picture by Barry._ ‘The triumph of the Thames,’ number 4 of
- the six pictures painted by James Barry (1741–1806) for the
- Society of Arts. Johnson’s friend, Dr. Charles Burney
- (1726–1814) figures as one of the renowned dead.
-
- ‘_Here’s flowers for you_’ _etc._ _Winter’s Tale_, Act. IV. Scene
- 4.
-
- 36. _Dr. Johnson’s ‘general remark_,’ _etc._ See his Life of Milton
- (_Works_, Oxford ed., vii. 119, 131), and Boswell’s _Life of
- Johnson_ (ed. G. B. Hill), iv. 305.
-
-
- ON MILTON’S VERSIFICATION
-
-No. 16 of the Round Table series. Hazlitt drew largely on this essay for
-his lecture on Shakspeare and Milton. See _Lectures on the English
-Poets_.
-
- PAGE
-
- 37. ‘_Makes Ossa like a wart._’ _Hamlet_, Act V. Scene 1.
-
- ‘_Sad task, yet argument_,’ _etc._ Quoted, with omissions, from
- _Paradise Lost_, IX. 13–45.
-
- 37. ‘_Him followed Rimmon_,’ _etc._ _Paradise Lost_, I. 467–469.
-
- ‘_As when a vulture_,’ _etc._ _Paradise Lost_, III. 431–439.
-
- 38. _It has been said_, _etc._ Hazlitt probably refers to Coleridge.
- See his _Lectures on Shakspeare_ (Bell’s ed., p. 526).
-
- ‘_He soon saw within ken_,’ _etc._ _Paradise Lost_, III. 621–634.
-
- 39. _Dr. Johnson._ Hazlitt somewhat exaggerates Johnson’s strictures
- on Milton. See _The Rambler_, Nos. 86, 88, and 90.
-
- ‘_His hand was known_,’ _etc._ _Paradise Lost_, I. 732–747.
-
- ‘_But chief the spacious hall_,’ _etc._ _Paradise Lost_, I.
- 762–788. In _The Examiner_ Hazlitt has a note to the words
- ‘brush’d with the hiss of rustling wings,’ pointing out that it
- was one of Dr. Johnson’s speculations, that all imitative sound
- is merely fanciful. He refers probably to _The Rambler_, No.
- 94.
-
- 40. ‘_Round he surveys_,’ _etc._ _Paradise Lost_, III. 555–567.
-
- ‘_In many a winding bout_,’ _etc._ _L’Allegro_, ll. 139–140.
-
- 41. ‘_The hidden soul of harmony._’ _L’Allegro_, l. 144.
-
- Note. Hazlitt quoted these couplets again in his _Lectures on the
- English Poets_. See Lecture IV. on Dryden and Pope.
-
-
- ON MANNER
-
-This essay is compounded of two papers in the Round Table series, Nos.
-17 and 18.| Hazlitt, however, omitted the greater part of No. 18, at the
-beginning of which he discussed Dryden’s version of _The Flower and the
-Leaf_. No. 18 was published in _Winterslow_ (1839) under the title of
-_Matter and Manner_.
-
- PAGE
-
- 42. _Says Lord Chesterfield._ ‘Observe the looks and countenances of
- those who speak, which is often a surer way of discovering the
- truth than what they say.’ _Letters to his Son_, No. cxxx.
-
- _Than his sentiments._ In _The Examiner_ appears the following
- note on this passage: ‘We find persons who write what may be
- called an _impracticable_ style; and their ideas are just as
- impracticable. They have as little tact of what is going on in
- the world as of the habitual meaning of words. Other writers
- betray their natural disposition by affectation, dryness, or
- levity of style. Style is the adaptation of words to things.
- Dr. Johnson had no style, that is, no scale of words answering
- to the differences of his subject. He always translated his
- ideas into the highest and most imposing form of expression, or
- more properly, into Latin words with English terminations.
- Goldsmith said to him, “If you had to write a fable, and to
- introduce little fishes speaking, you would make them talk like
- great whales.” It is a satire on this kind of taste that the
- most ignorant pretenders are in general what is generally
- understood by the finest writers. Women generally write a good
- style, because they express themselves according to the
- impression which things make upon them, without the affectation
- of authorship. They have besides more sense of propriety than
- men.’ For the story of Goldsmith see Boswell’s _Life of
- Johnson_ (ed. G. B. Hill), ii. 231.
-
- 43. _One of the most pleasant_, _etc._ It is evident from a passage
- in _Table Talk_ (on Coffee-House Politicians) that this friend
- is Leigh Hunt, and that ‘another friend’ is Lamb.
-
- ‘_As dry as the remainder biscuit_,’ _etc._ _As You Like It_, Act
- II. Scene 7.
-
- ‘_Learning is often_,’ _etc._ _2 Henry IV._, Act IV. Scene 3.
-
- 44. _Lord Chesterfield’s character of the Duke of Marlborough._
- _Letters to his Son_, No. clxviii.
-
- 45. Note 1. It appears from a MS. note in a copy of the 1817 edition
- that Hazlitt here refers to Lord Castlereagh.
-
- _The greatest man_, _etc._ Napoleon. Cf. _Table Talk_ (on Great
- and Little Things) and _Life of Napoleon_, Chap. lvii.
-
- Note 2. _A sonnet to the King._ This must be the sonnet
- beginning—
-
- ‘Now that all hearts are glad, all faces bright’
-
- to which Hazlitt referred again in _Political Essays_
- (‘Illustrations of _The Times_ Newspaper’). Wordsworth’s attack
- on a set of gipsies was in the poem entitled ‘Gipsies’ (1807).
-
- ‘_In a wise passiveness._’ _Expostulation and Reply_ (1798).
-
- _In the ‘Excursion’._ Book VIII.
-
- _‘They are a grotesque ornament,’ etc._ ‘Nobility is a graceful
- ornament to the civil order.’ Burke’s _Reflections on the
- Revolution in France_ (_Select Works_, ed. Payne, ii. 164).
-
- _This is enough._ In _The Examiner_ Hazlitt adds: ‘We really have
- a very great contempt for any one who differs from us on this
- point.’
-
- 46. _The Story of the glass-man._ The Barber’s story of his Fifth
- Brother.
-
- _That manner is everything._ ‘Sheer impudence answers almost the
- same purpose. “Those impenetrable whiskers have confronted
- flames.” Many persons, by looking big and talking loud, make
- their way through the world without any one good quality. We
- have here said nothing of mere personal qualifications, which
- are another set-off against sterling merit. Fielding was of
- opinion that “the more solid pretensions of virtue and
- understanding vanish before perfect beauty.” “A certain lady of
- a manor” (says _Don Quixote_[90] in defence of his attachment
- to _Dulcinea_, which however was quite of the Platonic kind),
- “had cast the eyes of affection on a certain squat, brawny
- lay-brother of a neighbouring monastery, to whom she was lavish
- of her favours. The head of the order remonstrated with her on
- this preference shown to one whom he represented as a very low,
- ignorant fellow, and set forth the superior pretensions of
- himself, and his more learned brethren. The lady having heard
- him to an end made answer: All that you have said may be very
- true; but know, that in those points which I admire, Brother
- Chrysostom is as great a philosopher, nay greater than
- Aristotle himself!” So the _Wife of Bath_:[91]—
-
- “To church was mine husband borne on the morrow
- With neighbours that for him maden sorrow,
- And Jenkin our clerk was one of tho:
- As help me God, when that I saw him go
- After the bier, methought he had a pair
- Of legs and feet, so clean and fair,
- That all my heart I gave unto his hold.”
-
- “All which, though we most potently believe, yet we hold it not
- honesty to have it thus set down.”’[92]—Note by Hazlitt in _The
- Examiner_, September 3, 1815.
-
- Note. _Sir Roger de Coverley._ _The Spectator_, No. 130.
-
- 47. _The successful experiment._ See _Peregrine Pickle_, Chap,
- lxxxvii.
-
-
- ON THE TENDENCY OF SECTS
-
-No. 19 of the Round Table series.
-
- PAGE
-
- 49. Note 1. The _Freedom of the Will_ of Jonathan Edwards (1703–1758)
- was published in 1754. Edwards was, of course, an American, as
- Flower reminded Hazlitt in his letter referred to below (49,
- note 2).
-
- ‘_Hid from ages._’ _Colossians_, i. 26.
-
- Note 2. Benjamin Flower, in a reply which he wrote to this essay
- (_The Examiner_, October 8, 1815), pointed out the ‘phenomenon’
- of a Quaker poet ‘appeared about thirty years since, Mr. Scott
- of Amwell, whose volume of poetry obtained the marked
- approbation of our acknowledged best critics.’ Johnson said of
- John Scott of Amwell’s (1730–1783) _Elegies_, ‘they are very
- well; but such as twenty people might write’ (Boswell’s _Life
- of Johnson_, ed. G. B. Hill, ii. 351). Another correspondent,
- signing himself ‘B. B.,’ wrote a letter to _The Examiner_
- (September 24, 1815), protesting against Hazlitt’s sketch of
- Quakerism. This was no doubt Bernard Barton (1784–1849),
- another Quaker poet, and afterwards the friend of Lamb.
-
- 50. ‘_There is some soul of goodness_,’ _etc._ _Henry V._, Act IV.
- Scene 1.
-
- ‘_Evil communications_,’ _etc._ _1 Corinthians_, xv. 33.
-
-
- ON JOHN BUNCLE
-
-No. 20 of the Round Table series.
-
-_The Life of John Buncle, Esq._, by Thomas (not John) Amory
-(1691?-1788), was published in two volumes, 1756–1766. A new edition in
-three volumes was published in 1825, very likely on Hazlitt’s
-recommendation. See _Memoirs of William Hazlitt_, ii. 198. A quotation
-from the present essay faces the title-page of the new edition (vol.
-i.). A volume containing the most readable parts of the book, and
-happily entitled ‘The Spirit of Buncle,’ was published in 1823. The book
-was a great favourite of Lamb’s as well as of Hazlitt’s.
-
- PAGE
-
- 52. _Botargos._ ‘Hard roes of mullet called botargos.’ Urquhart’s
- Rabelais, I. xxi.
-
- 53. ‘_Man was made to mourn._’
-
- ‘Who breathes, must suffer; and who thinks, must mourn.’
-
- Prior, _Solomon on the Vanity of the World_, III. 240.
-
- _He danced the Hays._
-
- ‘I will play on the tabor to the worthies, and let them dance the hay.’
-
- _Love’s Labour’s Lost_, Act V. Scene 1.
-
- _A mistress and a saint in every grove._ Goldsmith’s _Traveller_,
- 152.
-
- ‘_Most dolphin-like._’ _Antony and Cleopatra_, Act V. Scene 2.
-
- ‘_And there the antic sits_,’ _etc._ _Richard II._, Act III.
- Scene 2.
-
- 56. _Philips’s._ The Pastorals of Pope and Ambrose Philips
- (1675?-1749) appeared in Tonson’s _Miscellany_ (1709).
-
- _Sannazarius._ An English translation of the Piscatory Eclogues
- of Jacopo Sannazario was published in 1726.
-
- ‘_What he beautifully calls_,’ _etc._ See _The Complete Angler_,
- Part I. Chap. i.
-
- ‘_We accompany them_,’ _etc._ _The Complete Angler_, Part I.
- Chap. iv. The milkmaid sang ‘Come live with me, and be my
- love.’ That ‘smooth song’ (says Walton) ‘which was made by Kit
- Marlowe, now at least fifty years ago.
-
- And the milkmaid’s mother sung an answer to it, which was made by
- Sir _Walter Raleigh_ in his younger days.’
-
- 57. _Tottenham Cross._ The subject of one of the prints.
-
- Note. _His friendship for Cotton._ Charles Cotton (1630–1687),
- the translator of Montaigne (1685).
-
- Note. _Dr. Johnson said._ See Mrs. Piozzi’s _Anecdotes_
- (_Johnsonian Miscellanies_, ed. G. B. Hill, i. 332).
-
-
- ON THE CAUSES OF METHODISM
-
-No. 22 of the Round Table series. Leigh Hunt discussed this article in
-No. 24 of the series, republished in the 1817 edition of the _Round
-Table_, and entitled ‘On the Poetical Character.’ On the subject of
-Methodism Hunt had already spoken his mind in a series of articles in
-_The Examiner_, which he republished in 1809 under the title of _An
-Attempt to shew the folly and danger of Methodism_.
-
- PAGE
-
- 58. ‘_To sinner it or saint it._’ Pope’s _Moral Essays_, Ep. II. l.
- 15.
-
- ‘_The whole need not a physician._’ _St. Matthew_, ix. 12.
-
- ‘_Conceit in weakest_,’ _etc._ _Hamlet_, Act III. Scene 4.
-
- 59. _Mawworm._ In Isaac Bickerstaffe’s _Hypocrite_, altered from
- Colley Cibber’s _Nonjuror_, which was itself ‘a comedy threshed
- out of Molière’s _Tartuffe_.’ See the Lecture on the Comic
- Writers of the Last Century in _English Comic Writers_. For
- Oxberry’s acting of the part see _A View of the English Stage_.
-
- ‘_With sound of bell_,’ _etc._ _As You Like It_, Act II. Scene 7.
-
- ‘_Round fat oily men of God_,’ _etc._ Thomson’s _Castle of
- Indolence_, stanza 69.
-
- ‘_That burning and shining light._’ _St. John_, v. 35.
-
- Note. ‘_And filled up all the mighty void of sense._’ Pope’s
- _Essay on Criticism_, l. 210.
-
- 60. ‘_The vice_,’ _etc._ _Hebrews_, xii. 1.
-
- ‘_The Society for the Suppression of Vice._’ Founded in 1802.
- Sydney Smith criticised its methods in one of his _Edinburgh
- Review_ articles (Jan. 1809). Hazlitt refers to it again. See
- _ante_, p. 139.
-
- ‘_And sweet religion_,’ _etc._ _Hamlet_, Act III. Scene 4.
-
- ‘_Numbers without number._’ _Paradise Lost_, III. 346.
-
- 61. ‘_Dissolves them_,’ _etc._ _Il Penseroso_, ll. 165–166.
-
-
- ON THE MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM
-
-No. 26 of the Round Table series. The essay was in substance republished
-in _Characters of Shakespear’s Plays_. See _ante_, pp. 244–248, and the
-notes thereon.
-
- PAGE
-
- 64. ‘_Age cannot wither_,’ _etc._ _Antony and Cleopatra_, Act II.
- Scene 2.
-
- ‘_’Tis a good piece of work_,’ _etc._ _The Taming of the Shrew_,
- Act I. Scene 2.
-
- ‘_Would, cousin Silence_,’ _etc._ _2 Henry IV._, Act III. Scene
- 2. The dialogue on the death of old Double occurs earlier in
- the same scene.
-
- ‘_The most fearful wild-fowl living._’ _Midsummer Night’s Dream_,
- Act III. Scene 1.
-
- At the end of this essay in _The Examiner_ Hazlitt added the
- following ‘Note Extraordinary’: ‘We had just concluded our
- ramble with _Puck_ and _Bottom_, and were beginning to indulge
- in some less airy recreations, when in came the last week’s
- _Cobbett_,[93] and with one blow overset our Round Table, and
- marred all our good things. If while Mr. C. and his lady are
- sitting in their garden at Botley, like Adam and Eve in
- Paradise, the delight of one another, the envy of their
- neighbours, and the admiration of the rest of the world,
- suddenly a large fat hog from the wilds of Hampshire should
- bolt right through the hedge, and with snorting menaces and
- foaming tusks, proceed to lay waste the flower-pots and root up
- the potatoes, such as the surprise and indignation of so
- economical a couple would be on this occasion, was the
- consternation at our Table when Mr. Cobbett himself made his
- appearance among us, vowing vengeance against Milton and
- Shakespear, _Sir Hugh Evans_ and _Justice Shallow_, and all the
- delights of human life. We were not prepared for such an onset.
- More barbarous than Mr. Wordsworth’s calling Voltaire
- dull,[94] or than Voltaire’s calling Cato the only English
- tragedy;[95] more barbarous than Mr. Locke’s admiration of Sir
- Richard Blackmore; more barbarous than the declaration of a
- German Elector—afterwards made into an English king—that he
- hated poets and painters; more barbarous than the Duke of
- Wellington’s letter to Lord Castlereagh,[96] or than the
- _Catalogue Raisonné_ of the Flemish Masters published in the
- _Morning Chronicle_,[97] or than the Latin style of the second
- Greek scholar[98] of the age, or the English style of the
- first:—more barbarous than any or all of these is Mr. Cobbett’s
- attack on our two great poets. As to Milton, except the fine
- egotism of the situation of Adam and Eve, which Mr. Cobbett has
- applied to himself, there is not much in him to touch
- our politician: but we cannot understand his attack upon
- Shakespear, which is cutting his own throat. If Mr. Cobbett is
- for getting rid of his kings and queens, his fops and his
- courtiers, if he is for pelting _Sir Hugh_ and _Falstaff_ off
- the stage, yet what will he say to _Jack Cade_ and First and
- Second Mob? If we are to scout the Roman rabble, where will the
- _Register_ find English readers? Has the author never found
- himself out in Shakespear? He may depend upon it he is there,
- for all the people that ever lived are there! Has he never been
- struck with the valour of _Ancient Pistol_, who “would not
- swagger in any shew of resistance to a Barbary-hen”?[99] Can he
- not, upon occasion, “aggravate his voice”[100] like _Bottom_ in
- the play? In absolute insensibility, he is a fool to _Master
- Barnardine_; and there is enough of gross animal instinct in
- _Calyban_ to make a whole herd of Cobbetts. Mr. Cobbett admires
- Bonaparte; and yet there is nothing finer in any of his
- addresses to the French people than what _Coriolanus_ says to
- the Romans when they banish him. He abuses the Allies in good
- set terms; yet one speech of Constance describes them and their
- magnanimity better than all the columns of the _Political
- Register_. Mr. Cobbett’s address to the people of England[101]
- on the alarm of an invasion, which was stuck on all the
- church-doors in Great Britain, was not more eloquent than
- _Henry V.’s_ address to his soldiers before the battle of
- Agincourt; nor do we think Mr. Cobbett was ever a better
- specimen of the common English character than the two soldiers
- in the same play. After all, there is something so droll in his
- falling foul of Shakespear for want of delicacy, with his
- desperate lounges and bear-garden dexterity, snorting, fuming,
- and grunting, that we cannot help laughing at the affair, now
- that our surprise is over; as we suppose Mr. Cobbett does, if
- he can only keep him out of his premises by hallooing and
- hooting or dry blows, to see his old friend, Grill,[102]
- trudging along the highroad in search of his acorns and
- pig-nuts.’
-
-
- THE BEGGAR’S OPERA
-
-One of Hazlitt’s ‘Theatrical Examiners,’ and published in _The Examiner_
-on June 18, 1815.
-
- PAGE
-
- 65. _The Beggar’s Opera_ was produced at Lincoln’s Inn Fields on
- January 29, 1728.
-
- ‘_Happy alchemy of mind_,’ _etc._ Cf. Boswell (_Life of Johnson_,
- ed. G. B. Hill, iii. 65): ‘I have ever delighted in that
- intellectual chymistry, which can separate good qualities from
- evil in the same person.’
-
- ‘_O’erstepping the modesty of nature._’ _Hamlet_, Act III. Scene
- 2.
-
- ‘_Woman is like_,’ _etc._ _Beggar’s Opera_, Act I.
-
- _Taken from Tibullus._ Hazlitt probably means Catullus and refers
- to the lines (_Carm._ 62)
-
- ‘Ut flos in saeptis secretus nascitur hortis,’ etc.
-
- ‘_I see him sweeter_,’ _etc._ Act I.
-
- ‘_There is some soul of goodness in things evil._’ _Henry V._,
- Act IV. Scene 1.
-
- 66. ‘_Hussey, hussey_,’ _etc._ _Beggar’s Opera_, Act I.
-
- _Miss Hannah More’s laboured invectives._ Such as _Thoughts on
- the Importance of the Manners of the Great to General Society_
- (1788) and _An Estimate of the Religion of the Fashionable
- World_ (1790). See _ante_, p. 154, for another expression of
- Hazlitt’s belief in the disciplinary value of _The Beggar’s
- Opera_.
-
- Note. For further reference to Baron Grimm’s _Correspondance_
- (1812–14) see _ante_, p. 131, the essay ‘On the Literary
- Character.’ Claude Pierre Patu (1729–1757) published _Choix de
- pièces traduites de l’anglais_ (de Robert Dodsley et John Gay)
- in 1756. The collected works of Jean Joseph Vadé (1720–1757)
- were published in 1775.
-
-
- ON PATRIOTISM—A FRAGMENT
-
-This fragment is taken from one of the ‘Illustrations of Vetus’ which
-appeared originally in _The Morning Chronicle_ and were republished in
-_Political Essays_.
-
- PAGE
-
- 67. ‘_The love of mankind_‘, _etc._ Rousseau’s _Emile_, Liv. IV. p.
- 279 (edit. Garnier): a favourite quotation of Hazlitt’s.
-
-
- ON BEAUTY
-
-No. 29 of the Round Table series, and signed in _The Examiner_—‘An
-Amateur.’
-
- PAGE
-
- 68. _Three Papers_, _etc._ Reynolds’s papers in the _Idler_ are Nos.
- 76, 79, and 82. It is to the last, _On the true idea of
- Beauty_, that Hazlitt particularly refers.
-
- 69. _Spenser’s description of Belphœbe._ _The Faerie Queene_, Book
- II. Canto iii. st. 21 _et seq._
-
- 70. ‘_Her full dark eyes_,’ _etc._ The reference seems to be to
- _Leiden des jungen Werthers_ (December 6).
-
- 71. _Pope’s translation._ Homer’s _Odyssey_, V. 56–67.
-
- Note. _A classical friend._ Leigh Hunt.
-
- Note. ‘_That was Arion crown’d_,’ _etc._ _The Faerie Queene_,
- Book IV. Canto xi. st. 23 and 24.
-
- Note. _A striking description._ Burke’s _Reflections on the
- Revolution in France_ (_Select Works_, ed. Payne, ii. 89).
-
- Note. _The idea is in ‘Don Quixote.’_ Part II. Chap, xlviii. In
- _The Examiner_ this note was concluded as follows: ‘Much the
- same impression which the sight of the Queen of France made on
- Mr. Burke’s brain sixteen years before the French Revolution,
- did the reading of the New Eloise make on mine at the
- commencement of it. “Such is the stuff of which our dreams are
- made!”[103] This man (Burke), who was a half poet and a half
- philosopher, has done more mischief than perhaps any other
- person in the world. His understanding was not competent to the
- discovery of any truth, but it was sufficient to palliate a
- lie; his reasons, of little weight in themselves, thrown into
- the scale of power, were dreadful. Without genius to adorn the
- beautiful, he had the art to throw a dazzling veil over
- the deformed and disgusting, and to strew the flowers of
- imagination over the rotten carcase of corruption, not to
- prevent, but to communicate the infection. His jealousy of
- Rousseau[104] was one chief cause of his opposition to the
- French Revolution. The writings of the one had changed the
- institutions of a kingdom; while the speeches of the other,
- with the intrigues of his whole party, had changed nothing but
- the _turnspit of the King’s kitchen_.[105] He would have
- blotted out the broad, pure light of Heaven, because it did not
- first shine in upon the narrow, crooked passages of St.
- Stephen’s Chapel. The genius of Rousseau had levelled the
- towers of the Bastile with the dust; our zealous reformist, who
- would rather be doing mischief than nothing, tried therefore to
- patch them up again, by calling that loathsome dungeon the
- King’s Castle, and by fulsome adulation of the virtues of a
- Court Strumpet. This man had the impudence to say[106] that an
- Elector of Hanover was raised to the throne of these kingdoms,
- “in contempt of the will of the people,” while the hereditary
- successor was still alive. He was at once a liar, a coward, and
- a slave; a liar to his own heart, a coward to the success of
- his own cause, a slave to the power he despised. See his Letter
- about the Duke of Bedford, in which the man gets the better of
- the sycophant, and he belabours the Duke in good earnest. It is
- not a source of regret to reflect that he closed his eyes on
- the ruin of liberty, which he had been the principal means of
- effecting, and of his own projects, at the same time. He did
- not live to see that deliverance of mankind, bound hand and
- foot into the absolute, lasting, inexorable power of Kings
- and Priests, which the author of Joan of Arc[107] has so
- triumphantly celebrated. He did not live to see the sending of
- the Liberales of Spain to the gallies, and the liberating the
- Afrancesadoes from prison, for which our romantic Laureate, who
- sees so much farther into futurity than the Edinburgh
- Reviewers,[108] thanks God. He did not live to read that
- Sonnet[109] to the King which Mr. Wordsworth has written, in
- imitation of Milton’s Sonnet to Cromwell. There is a species of
- literary prostitution which has sprung up and spread wide in
- these days, more nauseous and despicable than any recorded in
- Juvenal. It proves, however, one thing, that is, the force
- which knowledge and opinion have acquired, and which makes it
- worth while for power to court and pervert those faculties
- which were intended to enlighten and reform the world, in order
- to plunge it into a darkness that may be felt; and slavery,
- that can only cease by putting a stop to the propagation of the
- species.’ Hazlitt used a part of this passage as a note to his
- essay ‘On Good-Nature.’ See _post_, p. 105 note.
-
- 72. _Mr. Burke_, _etc._ See his _Essay on the Sublime and Beautiful_,
- Part III. Sect. xv.
-
- _Which describe pleasant motions._ ‘It has been conjectured that
- the pleasure derived from visible form, might be always
- resolved into the absence of every thing disagreeable to the
- touch or difficult in motion.’ Note by Hazlitt in _The
- Examiner_.
-
- ‘_He hath set his bow_,’ _etc._ _Ecclesiasticus_, xliii. 11, 12.
-
- _Titian’s ‘Bath of Diana.’_ _Diana and Actaeon_, now the property
- of the Earl of Ellesmere, in Bridgewater House. Hazlitt
- described this picture at length in his _Sketches of the
- Principal Picture Galleries in England_ (The Marquis of
- Stafford’s Gallery).
-
-
- ON IMITATION
-
-No. 30 of the Round Table series.
-
- PAGE
-
- 73. _The new Spurzheim principles._ See Hazlitt’s essays ‘On Dreams’
- and ‘On Dr. Spurzheim’s Theory’ in _The Plain Speaker_.
-
- 74. Note. _Vanhuysum._ Jan van Huysum (1682–1749).
-
- 75. _Pansy freak’d with jet._ _Lycidas_, l. 144.
-
- 76. ‘_A pleasure in art_,’ _etc._
-
- ‘There is a pleasure in poetic pains,
- Which only poets know.’
-
- Cowper’s _Task, The Timepiece_, ll. 285–286.
-
- Cf. _Table Talk_ (‘On the Pleasure of Painting’): ‘There is a
- pleasure in painting which none but painters know.’ The
- original of the expression seems to be Dryden’s ‘There is a
- pleasure, sure, in being mad, which none but madmen know’
- (_Spanish Friar_, Act II. Scene 1).
-
- _Titian’s ‘Schoolmaster.’_ For an account of this picture see
- Hazlitt’s _Sketches of the Principal Picture Galleries in
- England_ (the Marquis of Stafford’s Gallery).
-
-
- ON GUSTO
-
-No. 40 of the Round Table series.
-
- PAGE
-
- 77. _Albano’s._ Francesco Albani (1578–1660), a pupil of Ludovico
- Caracci.
-
- 78. _To touch them._ In _The Examiner_ Hazlitt gives the following
- note to this passage: ‘This may seem obscure. We will therefore
- avail ourselves of our privilege to explain as Members of
- Parliament do, when they let fall any thing too paradoxical,
- novel, or abstruse, to be immediately apprehended by the other
- side of the House. When the Widow Wadman[110] looked over my
- Uncle Toby’s map of the Siege of Namur with him, and as he
- pointed out the approaches of his battalion in a transverse
- line across the plain to the gate of St. Nicholas, kept her
- hand constantly pressed against his, if my Uncle Toby had then
- “been an artist and could paint,” (as Mr. Fox wished himself to
- be,[111] that “he might draw Bonaparte’s conduct to the King of
- Prussia in the blackest colours”) my Uncle Toby would have
- drawn the hand of his fair enemy in the manner we have above
- described. We have heard a good story of this same Bonaparte
- playing off a very ludicrous parody of the Widow Wadman’s
- stratagem upon as great a commander by sea as my Uncle Toby was
- by land. Now, when Sir Isaac Newton, who was sitting smoking
- with his mistress’s hand in his, took her little finger and
- made use of it as a tobacco-pipe stopper, there was here a
- total absence of mind, or a great want of gusto.’
-
- _Mr. West._ Benjamin West (1738–1820), historical painter,
- succeeded Sir J. Reynolds as President of the Royal Academy in
- 1792.
-
- 80. ‘_Or where Chineses_,’ _etc._ _Paradise Lost_, III. 438–439.
-
- ‘_Wild above rule_,’ _etc._ _Ib._ V. 297.
-
-
- ON PEDANTRY
-
-No. 32 of the Round Table series. See _ante_, p. 382, for a reference by
-Hazlitt to this essay.
-
- PAGE
-
- 80. _The pedantry of Parson Adams._ See _Joseph Andrews_, Book III.
- Chap. v.
-
- _Scotch Pedagogue._ _Roderick Random_, Chap. xiv.
-
- _Seeing ourselves_, _etc._ Burns, _To a Louse_, st. 8.
-
- 81. _Monsieur Jourdain._ In _Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme_.
-
- Note. ‘_Not to admire anything._’
-
- ‘Nil admirari, prope res est una, Numici,
- Solaque, quæ possit facere et servare beatum.’—Horace, Ep. I. vi. I.
-
- 82. _In the Library_, _etc._ At his father’s house at Wem. See
- _Memoirs of William Hazlitt_, i. 33. The _Bibliotheca Fratrum
- Polonorum_, _etc._, was published in eight volumes folio, 1656.
-
- ‘_From all this world’s_,’ _etc._ ‘From worldly cares himselfe he
- did esloyne.’ _The Faerie Queene_, Book I. Canto iv. st. 20. In
- _The Examiner_ Hazlitt published the following note: ‘Mr.
- Wordsworth has on a late occasion humorously applied this line
- of Spenser to persons holding sinecure places under government.
- He seems to intend adding to the list of such places that of
- Poet Laureate. This we think a decided improvement on the
- system.’ The reference is to Wordsworth’s sonnet, ‘Occasioned
- by the Battle of Waterloo,’ beginning ‘The bard whose soul is
- meek as dawning day.’
-
- 83. ‘_Mitigated authors_,’ _etc._ ‘It was this opinion which
- mitigated kings into companions, and raised private men to be
- fellows with kings. Without force, or opposition, it subdued
- the fierceness of pride and power; it obliged sovereigns to
- submit to the soft collar of social esteem,’ etc. Burke’s
- _Reflections on the Revolution in France_ (_Select Works_, ed.
- Payne, ii. 90).
-
- _The Spectator._ See _The Spectator_, No. 131.
-
-
- THE SAME SUBJECT CONTINUED
-
-No. 33 the Round Table series.
-
- PAGE
-
- 84. _A poetical enthusiast._ Wordsworth presumably.
-
- ‘_A clerk ther was_,’ _etc._ _Canterbury Tales_, Prologue, ll.
- 285 _et seq._
-
- 85. ‘_Chemist, statesman_,’ _etc._ Dryden’s _Absalom and Achitophel_,
- l. 550.
-
- ‘_Tongues in the trees_,’ _etc._ _As You Like It_, Act II. Scene
- 1.
-
- 86. _Vestris was so far right_, _etc._ Vestris (1729–1808), ‘Le Dieu
- de la danse,’ said that Europe contained only three great men,
- himself, Voltaire, and Frederick of Prussia.
-
- _We do not see_, _etc._ Johnson and Wordsworth were of the
- opposite opinion. See Boswell’s _Life_, ed. G. B. Hill, iv.
- 114, and Rogers’s _Table-Talk_, p. 234.
-
- 87. _In Froissart’s ‘Chronicles.’_ Book IV. chapter 14 (Panthéon
- Litteraire). The man was not a monk at all.
-
- 88. ‘_The sovereign’st thing on earth._’ _1 Henry IV._, Act I. Scene
- 3.
-
- _Uneasy and insecure._ In _The Examiner_ the following note is
- appended: ‘It has been found necessary to cement them with
- blood. “Plus de belles paroles, messieurs, je veux du sang,”
- is the language of all absolute sovereigns to their subjects,
- when the film drops from their eyes which leads mankind to
- suppose themselves the property of tyrants. If men are to be
- treated like slaves, it is best that they should think
- themselves born to be so. _Plus de belles paroles._ The
- French Revolution was the necessary consequence of our
- English Revolution and of the Reformation. A crusade once
- more to re-establish the infallibility of the Pope all over
- the Continent would be a logical inference from the late
- crusade to restore divine right.’
-
-
- ON THE CHARACTER OF ROUSSEAU
-
-No. 36 of the Round Table series.
-
- PAGE
-
- 89. Note. In _The Examiner_ this note was continued as follows: ‘He
- was the founder of Jacobinism, which disclaims the division of
- the species into two classes, the one the property of the
- others. It was of the disciples of _his_ school, where
- principle is converted into passion, that Mr. Burke said and
- said truly,—“Once a Jacobin, and always a Jacobin!” The adept
- in this school does not so much consider the political injury
- as the personal insult. This is the way to put the case, to set
- the true revolutionary leaven, the self-love which is at the
- bottom of every heart, at work, and this was the way in which
- Rousseau put it. It then becomes a question between man and
- man, which there is but one way of deciding.’
-
- 90. ‘_Va Zanetto_,’ _etc._ Part II. liv. 7.
-
- ‘_Louise Eleonore_,’ _etc._ Part I. liv. 2.
-
- 91. ‘_As fast_,’ _etc._ _Othello_, Act V. Scene 2.
-
- _There are, indeed, impressions_, _etc._ A quotation from
- Rousseau’s _Confessions_. See Hazlitt’s essay entitled ‘My
- first Acquaintance with Poets.’
-
- 92. ‘_Ah, voila de la pervenche!_’ _Confessions_, Part I. liv. 6.
-
- _Mr. Wordsworth’s discovery._ The reference appears to be to
- Wordsworth’s poem, ‘The Sparrow’s Nest.’
-
-
- ON DIFFERENT SORTS OF FAME
-
-No. 37 of the Round Table series.
-
- PAGE
-
- 93. _Fitzosborne’s Letters_, by William Melmoth the younger
- (1710–1799), were published in two vols. in 1742–1747.
- Hazlitt’s quotation seems to be merely a summary of a passage
- in Letter X. (p. 35, edit. 1748) which is itself quoted from
- Wollaston’s _Religion of Nature Delineated_.
-
- Note. _Burns._ See his autobiographical letter to Dr. John Moore,
- 2nd August 1787. (_Works_, ed. Chambers and Wallace, i. 20).
-
- 94. ‘_Bitter bad judges._’ _Beggar’s Opera_, Act I. Scene 1.
-
- ‘_Makes ambition virtue._’ _Othello_, Act III. Scene 3.
-
- _Dr. Johnson._ See his Life of Milton (_Works_, vii. 108).
-
- ‘_Fame is the spur_,’ _etc._ _Lycidas_, ll. 70–77.
-
- _Pluck its fruits, unripe and crude._ _Lycidas_, l. 3.
-
- 95. _Hogarth’s ‘Distressed Poet.’_ The map of the gold-mines of Peru
- was substituted in the impression of 1740 for a print of Pope
- thrashing Curll in the original impression of 1736.
-
- _A man of genius and eloquence._ Coleridge presumably.
-
- 96. _Elphinstone._ James Elphinston (1721–1809), who superintended an
- Edinburgh edition of _The Rambler_, in which he gave English
- translations of most of the mottoes. This, however, was far
- from being his only literary enterprise, and it is strange that
- Hazlitt should ‘know nothing more of him.’ He published many
- translations, one of which, _A Specimen of the Translations of
- Epigrams of Martial_ (1778), achieved notoriety from its
- extreme badness. In his later life he devoted himself to the
- invention of a kind of phonetic spelling, which he explained in
- _Propriety ascertained in her Picture, or English Speech and
- Spelling under Mutual Guides_ (1787), and other works.
-
- _Yorick and the Frenchman._ Sterne’s _Sentimental Journey_. The
- Passport.
-
-
- CHARACTER OF JOHN BULL
-
-No. 39 of the Round Table series.
-
- PAGE
-
- 97. _A respectable publication._ _Edinburgh Review_, xxvi. p. 96
- (Feb. 1816). The passage quoted is from a review by Hazlitt
- himself of Schlegel’s _Lectures on Dramatic Literature_.
-
-
- ON GOOD NATURE
-
-No. 41 of the Round Table series.
-
- PAGE
-
- 100. _Says Froissart._ This well-known saying is wrongly attributed to
- Froissart. See _Notes and Queries_ for 1863 and subsequent
- years.
-
- 102. _An Englishman, who would be thought a profound one._ Wordsworth.
- See p. 116.
-
- 103. _Forge the seal of the realm_, _etc._ The allusion seems to be to
- the events of the spring of 1804 when Lord Eldon, during the
- king’s illness, affixed the great seal to a commission giving
- the royal assent to certain bills.
-
- 104. _Good digestion wait on appetite._ _Macbeth_, Act III. Scene 4.
-
- _Without control._ In _The Examiner_ Hazlitt appended as a note:
- ‘Henry VIII. was a good-natured monarch. He cut off his wives’
- heads with as little ceremony as if they had been eels. This
- character ought, as Mr. Cobbett says, to be hooted off the
- stage, as a disgrace to human nature. Shakspeare represented
- kings as they were in his time.’
-
- 104. _Mr. Vansittart._ Nicholas Vansittart (1766–1851), created Baron
- Bexley in 1823, was Chancellor of the Exchequer from 1812 till
- 1822.
-
- _Everything by starts and nothing long._ _Absalom and
- Achitophel_, Part I. l. 548.
-
- 105. Note. This note is part of the note on Burke, which in _The
- Examiner_ appeared at the foot of the essay ‘On Beauty.’ See
- _ante_, p. 71.
-
-
- ON THE CHARACTER OF MILTON’S EVE
-
-No. 42 of the Round Table series, with occasional passages from No. 43,
-on Shakspeare’s female characters, the substance of which was published
-in _Characters of Shakespear’s Plays_ (_Cymbeline_, _Othello_, and
-_Winter’s Tale_).
-
- PAGE
-
- 105. ‘_As the vine curls her tendrils._’ _Paradise Lost_, IV. 307.
-
- 106. ‘_Two of far nobler shape_,’ _etc._ _Paradise Lost_, IV. 288–311.
-
- 107. ‘_That day I oft remember_,’ _etc._ _Paradise Lost_, IV. 449–465.
-
- ‘_So spake our general mother_,’ _etc._ _Paradise Lost_, IV.
- 492–501.
-
- ‘_So much the more_,’ _etc._ _Paradise Lost_, V. 8–20.
-
- 108. ‘_When Adam thus to Eve_,’ _etc._ _Paradise Lost_, IV. 610–611.
-
- ‘_To whom thus Eve_,’ _etc._ _Paradise Lost_, IV. 634.
-
- ‘_To whom our general ancestor_,’ _etc._ _Paradise Lost_, IV.
- 659–660.
-
- ‘_Methought close at mine ear_,’ _etc._ _Paradise Lost_, V.
- 35–47.
-
- ‘_So talked the spirited sly snake._’ _Paradise Lost_, IX. 613.
-
- ‘_So cheered he his fair spouse_,’ _etc._ _Paradise Lost_, V.
- 129–135.
-
- 109. ‘_Under his forming hands_,’ _etc._ _Paradise Lost_, VIII.
- 470–477.
-
- ‘_In shadier bower_,’ _etc._ _Paradise Lost_, IV. 705–719.
-
- ‘_Meanwhile at table Eve_,’ _etc._ _Paradise Lost_, V. 443–450.
-
- 110. ‘_Yet not more sweet_,’ _etc._ Southey’s _Carmen Nuptiale_,
- Proem, stanza 18.
-
- ‘_O unexpected stroke_,’ _etc._ _Paradise Lost_, XI. 268–285.
-
- 111. ‘_This most afflicts me_,’ _etc._ _Paradise Lost_, XI. 315–333.
-
-
- OBSERVATIONS ON MR. WORDSWORTH’S POEM ‘THE EXCURSION’
-
-This essay is composed of two papers by Hazlitt which appeared in _The
-Examiner_ on August 21 and August 28, 1814.
-
- PAGE
-
- 112. ‘_Without form and void._’ _Genesis_, i. 2.
-
- 113. ‘_The bare trees and mountains bare._’ Wordsworth, ‘To my
- Sister.’
-
- ‘_Exchange the shepherd’s flock._’ _Excursion_, Book VI.
-
- 114. ‘_The sad historian of the pensive vale._’ Goldsmith’s _The
- Deserted Village_, l. 136.
-
- ‘_Our system is not fashioned_,’ _etc._ _Excursion_, Book VI.
-
- ‘_Such as the meeting soul may pierce._’ _L’Allegro_, l. 138.
-
- ‘_In that fair clime_,’ _etc._ _Excursion_, Book IV.
-
- 115. ‘_Now shall our great discoverers obtain_,’ _etc._ _Excursion_,
- Book IV.
-
- 116. ‘_Poor gentleman_,’ _etc._ Wycherley’s _Love in a Wood_, Act III.
- Scene 1.
-
- _Dull._ Wordsworth speaks of _Candide_ as ‘this dull product of a
- scoffer’s pen’ (_Excursion_, Book II.) and refers to it again
- in Book IV.:—
-
- ‘Him I mean
- Who penned, to ridicule confiding faith,
- This sorry Legend.’
-
- See _ante_, p. 102.
-
- 117. _Tout homme reflechi_, _etc._ Cf. ‘J’ose presque assurer que
- l’état de réflexion est un état contre nature, et que l’homme
- qui médite est un animal dépravé.’ Rousseau’s _Discours sur
- l’origine de l’inégalité parmi les hommes_ (édit. Firmin-Didot,
- p. 52).
-
- ‘_From that abstraction I was roused_,’ _etc._ _Excursion_, Book
- III.
-
- 118. ‘_For that other loss_,’ _etc._ _Excursion_, Book IV.
-
- 119. ‘_What though the radiance_,’ _etc._ _Intimations of
- Immortality_, stanza 10.
-
-
- THE SAME SUBJECT CONTINUED
-
-From _The Examiner_, October 2, 1814.
-
- PAGE
-
- 120. ‘_With glistering spires_,’ _etc._ _Paradise Lost_, III. 550.
-
- ‘_The great vision of the guarded mount._’ _Lycidas_, l. 161.
-
- 121. ‘_A sudden illness_,’ _etc._ _Excursion_, Book VI.
-
- 123. _Aristotle observed._ In _The Poetics_.
-
- _Bells or Lancaster’s._ Andrew Bell (1753–1832) founder of the
- Madras system of education, and Joseph Lancaster (1770–1838).
- For an account of these two rival reformers of education see
- Leslie Stephen’s _The English Utilitarians_, II. 17–19.
-
- _Guzman d’Alfarache._ Hazlitt discussed this novel by Mateo
- Aleman, published in 1599, in his _English Comic Writers_
- (Lecture on the English Novelists).
-
- _A discipline of humanity._ Bacon’s _Essays_, ‘Of Marriage and
- Single Life.’
-
- 124. _The Whig and Jacobite friends._ _Excursion_, Book VI.
-
- _Sir Alfred Irthing._ _Excursion_, Book VII.
-
- ‘_Have proved a monument._’ From the sonnet in which Wordsworth
- dedicated _The Excursion_ to Lord Lonsdale.
-
-
- CHARACTER OF THE LATE MR. PITT
-
-This ‘character’ originally appeared in _Free Thoughts on Public
-Affairs_, _etc._ (1806). It must have been a favourite with the author,
-for he afterwards reprinted it in _The Eloquence of the British Senate_,
-_etc._ (1807), in _The Round Table_ (1817), and in _Political Essays_
-(1819). It also appeared in the posthumous _Winterslow_ (1839). See note
-on p. 383, _ante_.
-
- PAGE
-
- 127. ‘_They had learned the trick_,’ _etc._ Hobbes’s _Behemoth_
- (_Works_, ed. Molesworth, vi. 240).
-
- 128. ‘_Not matchless_,’ _etc._ _Paradise Lost_, VI. 341–2.
-
- _And in its liquid texture_, _etc._ _Paradise Lost_, VI. 148–149.
-
-
- ON RELIGIOUS HYPOCRISY
-
-From _The Examiner_, October 9, 1814, ‘Common-places,’ No. 1.
-
- PAGE
-
- 129. ‘_But ’tis not so above._’ Hamlet, Act III. Scene 3.
-
- ‘_Compelled to give in evidence_,’ _etc._ _Ibid._
-
- 130. ‘_Open and apparent shame._’ _1 Henry IV._, Act II. Scene 4.
-
- 131. _Elymas the sorcerer._ See _Sketches of the Principal Picture
- Galleries in England_ (the Pictures at Hampton Court) where
- Hazlitt describes this cartoon.
-
-
- ON THE LITERARY CHARACTER
-
-Reprinted with some omissions from a letter which appeared in _The
-Morning Chronicle_ for October 28, 1813, entitled ‘Baron Grimm and the
-Edinburgh Reviewers.’
-
- PAGE
-
- 131. _A late number_, _etc._ _Edinburgh Review_, vol. xxi. July 1813.
- The _Correspondance_ of Friedrich Melchior, Baron Grimm
- (1723–1807) was published in 1812–14. The article in the
- _Edinburgh_ is by Jeffrey. Hazlitt, in _The Examiner_, quotes
- from it at greater length, and proceeds: ‘These remarks,
- however shrewd and ingenious in themselves, are somewhat
- irrelevant to the literary and philosophical character of Mr.
- Grimm and his friends. There seems to have been an odd
- transposition of ideas in the writer’s mind; for the whole of
- his reasoning relates to the manners of fashionable life, or
- the tendency of mixed and agreeable society in general, to
- produce levity and insensibility, and does not at all apply to
- the peculiar defects of the literary character, or account for
- that hard-heartedness, which Mr. Burke attributes, by way of
- emphasis, to the _thorough-bred metaphysician_.[112] The two
- characters are evidently distinct, and proceed from very
- different and even opposite causes, which ought not to have
- been confounded. It would have been a task worthy of the
- Edinburgh Reviewers to have pointed out the sources of each,
- and to have shewn how both appear to have united in the present
- instance with the natural levity of the French character, to
- produce that “faultless monster which the world ne’er saw”
- before.[113] Much is undoubtedly to be given to accidental and
- local circumstances. Boswell’s Life of Johnson presents a very
- different picture of men and manners from Grimm’s Memoirs,
- though in the circle described by the former there were men who
- at least rivalled M. Grimm in literature, and in politeness and
- knowledge of mankind might vie with Baron d’Holbach. The
- profligacy of the French court, and the mummeries of the
- established religion might naturally produce an almost satiric
- license and impudence among the enlightened partisans of the
- new order of things, and lead them to regard all religion as a
- barefaced cheat, and every pretension to virtue as hypocrisy.
- The peculiar intelligible features of the philosophical and
- literary character are, however, stamped on every page of M.
- Grimm’s correspondence; and as they do not seem to have been
- very well distinguished by the Reviewer, I shall venture to
- throw out a few hints on the subject, in the hope that they may
- be taken up and embodied in an authentic form in some future
- supplementary volume.’
-
- 133. _Multiplicity of persons and things._ Hazlitt quotes with
- characteristic inaccuracy the _Edinburgh_ article on Grimm (see
- p. 131). A few lines further on he speaks of a ‘_succession_ of
- persons and things.’
-
- _Rocks of Meillerie._ _La Nouvelle Héloïse_, Part IV. 17.
-
- 135. _Mr. Shandy._ _Tristram Shandy_, V. Chap, iii., where Sterne
- tells the story of Cicero and his daughter referred to in the
- text.
-
- ‘_Hæret lateri_,’ _etc._ Virgil, _Aeneid_, V. 73.
-
- ‘_Clad in flesh and blood._’ From Burke, _Reflections on the
- Revolution in France_ (_Select Works_, ed. Payne, ii. 101).
-
- _The ghosts of Homer’s heroes._ _Odyssey_, Book XI.
-
- ‘_Play round the head, but never reach the heart._’
-
- ‘All fame is foreign, but of true desert;
- Plays round the head, but comes not to the heart.’
-
- Pope’s _Essay on Man_, IV. 254.
-
- Hazlitt’s letter in _The Morning Chronicle_ concluded as
- follows: ‘There is another very striking distinction between
- the indifference and insensibility to moral good and evil, to
- be met with in the philosopher or the man of the world, which
- the Reviewer has not pointed out. In the one, it is the
- effect of “frivolity, dissipation, and familiarity with
- vice”; in the other, it is oftener the effect of disappointed
- hope and early enthusiasm. The aversion of the philosopher to
- moral speculations has almost always the same source as the
- exclamation of Brutus, “Oh Virtue! I embraced thee as a
- substance, and I find thou art a shadow!” There is hardly any
- one of the persons who figure in these memoirs who did not
- set out with some panacea for the salvation of mankind, with
- as much sanguine extravagance as ever knight-errants indulged
- to conquer giants and rescue distressed damsels. The wounds
- received in the conflict might close, but the scar would
- remain. Indeed, the practical knowledge of vice and misery
- makes a stronger impression on the mind, when it has once
- imbibed a habit of abstract reasoning. Evil thus becomes
- embodied in a general principle, and shews its happy form in
- all things. It is a fatal, inevitable necessity hanging over
- us. It follows us wherever we go—if we fly into the uttermost
- parts of the earth, it is there; whether we turn to the right
- or the left, we cannot escape from it.
-
- ‘This, it is true, is the disease of philosophy; but it is one to
- which it is liable in minds of a certain cast, after the first
- ardour of expectation has been disabused by experience, and the
- finer feelings have received an irrecoverable shock from the
- jarring of the world.
-
- ‘There seems a peculiar tenaciousness in the French character in
- this respect, an unfortunate aptitude to cling to every vice
- and catch at every folly, or else a want of freshness of
- feeling, of that elastic force about the heart which repels the
- approach of moral or intellectual depravity.
-
- ‘What is said of the tone of the literary society of Paris, is
- equally misunderstood. The Reviewers hardly mean to represent
- the exclusion of tediousness and pertinacious wrangling, as the
- general character of assemblies of wits, and philosophers in
- all ages and nations. If so, their opinion differs from that of
- the Sage. The fact is, that the men of letters at this period,
- by mixing in the fashionable circles, took the tone of good
- company, as the people of fashion, by their familiarity with
- men of letters, received the tincture of philosophy. The two
- characters were blended together in real life, and are
- confounded in the Edinburgh Review.’
-
- 135. Note. _Plato’s Cave._ _Republic_, Book VII.
-
-
- ON COMMON-PLACE CRITICS
-
-No. 47 of the Round Table series.
-
- PAGE
-
- 136. _Tout homme réfléchi_, _etc._ See note to p. 117.
-
- ‘_Nor can I think what thoughts they can conceive._’ Dryden, _The
- Hind and the Panther_, Part I. l. 315.
-
- _We have already._ In a paper (by Leigh Hunt) _On Commonplace
- People_ (_Examiner_, March 19, 1815).
-
- 138. _The music which has been since introduced_, _etc._ The famous
- ‘Macbeth music’ written for D’Avenant’s version produced,
- according to Genest, in 1672. This music, traditionally
- assigned to Matthew Locke, is now attributed to Purcell.
-
- 139. _Mr. Westall’s drawings._ Richard Westall (1765–1836).
-
- _Horne Tooke’s account_, _etc._ See _The Diversions of Purley_
- and Hazlitt’s essay on Horne Tooke in _The Spirit of the Age_.
-
- ‘_For true no-meaning puzzles more than wit._’ Pope’s _Moral
- Essays_, II. 114.
-
- _The new Schools for all._ For the famous educational schemes
- of Andrew Bell and Joseph Lancaster and for Bentham’s
- _Panopticon_, see Leslie Stephen’s _English Utilitarians_.
-
- _The Penitentiary._ Millbank Prison, formerly known as the
- Penitentiary, was the ultimate result of Bentham’s _Panopticon_
- scheme and was opened in 1816.
-
- _The new Bedlam._ The new Bedlam Hospital was opened in 1815.
-
- _The new steamboats._ The first steamboat had been launched on
- the Clyde in 1812.
-
- _The gaslights._ The Chartered Gas Company obtained its Act of
- Parliament in 1810.
-
- _The Bible Society._ The British and Foreign Bible Society was
- established in 1804.
-
- _The Society for the Suppression of Vice._ See _ante_, note to p.
- 60.
-
-
- ON THE CATALOGUE RAISONNÉ OF THE BRITISH INSTITUTION
-
-These two papers are taken (with considerable variations) from the two
-last of three ‘Literary Notices,’ dealing with the Catalogue, which
-Hazlitt contributed to _The Examiner_ on Nov. 3, Nov. 10, and Nov. 17,
-1816. The first of these ‘Literary Notices’ was never republished by
-Hazlitt. All three were republished in their _Examiner_ form in the
-second volume of _Criticisms on Art_, _etc._ (2 vols., 1843–44), edited
-by the author’s son, who omitted from his edition of _The Round Table_
-the two essays in the present text. All three essays will be included in
-a later volume of the present edition.
-
- PAGE
-
- 140. _Our former remarks._ In _The Examiner_, Nov. 3, 1816.
-
- 141. _The Prince Regent’s new sewer._ Presumably the Regent’s Canal,
- part of which was opened in 1814.
-
- 142. ‘_The scale by which_,’ _etc._ _Paradise Lost_, VIII. 591.
-
- _Mrs. Peachum’s coloured handkerchiefs._ _Beggar’s Opera_, Act 1.
-
- 143. ‘_A name great above all names._’ _Philippians_, ii. 9.
-
- 143. _Mr. Payne Knight._ Richard Payne Knight gave evidence in 1816
- before a Select Committee of the House of Commons upon the
- value of the Elgin Marbles. He placed them in the second rank
- of art, and valued them at £25,000. They were bought by the
- nation for £35,000. Haydon the artist wrote a long letter to
- _The Examiner_ (March 17, 1816) on the subject, entitled ‘On
- the Judgment of Connoisseurs being preferred to that of
- Professional Men, Elgin Marbles, etc.’
-
- 144. _Mr. Soane._ John Soane (1753–1837), knighted in 1831. His house
- and its contents, presented by him to the nation in 1833, now
- form the Soane Museum.
-
- ‘_With riches fineless._’ _Othello_, Act III. Scene 3.
-
- ‘_Beastly; subtle as the fox_,’ _etc._ _Cymbeline_, Act. III.
- Scene 3.
-
- ‘_The link_,’ _etc._ _Troilus and Cressida_, Act I. Scene 3.
-
- _It is many years ago_, _etc._ Apparently, says Mr. W. C.
- Hazlitt, about 1798, at St. Neot’s, Huntingdonshire. See _The
- English Comic Writers_, where this passage is repeated in the
- Lecture on the Works of Hogarth.
-
- 145. ‘_How were we then uplifted._’ _Troilus and Cressida_, Act III.
- Scene 2.
-
- ‘_Temples not made with hands_‘, _etc._ _Acts_, vii. 48.
-
- _E. O. Tables._ A new game introduced shortly before 1782, when a
- Bill was brought in prohibiting it under severe penalties. The
- Bill was lost in the House of Lords. See _Parl. Hist._, vol.
- xxiii. pp. 110–113.
-
- ‘_Cutpurses of the art_,’ _etc._
-
- ‘A cutpurse of the empire and the rule,
- That from a shelf the precious diadem stole
- And put it in his pocket!’
-
- _Hamlet_, Act III. Scene 4.
-
-
- THE SAME SUBJECT CONTINUED
-
- 146. ‘_That a great man’s memory_,’ _etc._ _Hamlet_, Act III. Scene 2.
-
- _Their late President._ Sir Joshua Reynolds.
-
- 147. ‘_Feel the future in the instant._’ _Macbeth_, Act I. Scene 5.
-
- 148. ‘_Depend upon it_,’ _etc._ This letter was not avowed by Burke,
- but was attributed to him by Barry himself and by Sir James
- Prior in his _Life of Burke_, (Bohn, p. 227).
-
- 149. ‘_Playing at will_,’ _etc._
-
- ‘——and played at will
- Her virgin fancies, pouring forth more sweet,
- Wild above rule or art, enormous bliss.’
-
- _Paradise Lost_, v. 294–296.
-
- _Highmore_, _etc._ Joseph Highmore (1692–1780); Francis Hayman
- (1708–1776), one of the founders of the Royal Academy; Thomas
- Hudson (1701–1779), portrait painter; Sir Godfrey Kneller
- (1646–1723).
-
- ‘_Like flowers in men’s caps_,’ _etc._ _Macbeth_, Act IV. Scene
- 3.
-
- _Hoppner_, _etc._ John Hoppner (1758–1810), the portrait painter;
- John Opie (1761–1807); Sir Martin Archer Shee (1769–1850),
- President of the Royal Academy from 1830 to 1845; Philip James
- Loutherbourg (1740–1812), scene painter to Garrick; John
- Francis Rigaud (1742–1810); George Romney (1734–1802). Alderman
- John Boydell’s (1719–1804) famous Shakespeare Gallery comprised
- one hundred and seventy pictures. The engravings were published
- in 1802.
-
- 150. ‘_Gone to the vault_,’ _etc._ A favourite quotation of Burke’s
- from the lines in Shakespeare:—
-
- ‘To that same ancient vault
- Where all the kindred of the Capulets lie.’
-
- _Romeo and Juliet_, Act IV. Scene 1.
-
- _The picture ... of Charles I._ In Hazlitt’s time this picture
- was at Blenheim, and he referred to it in his _Sketches of the
- Principal Picture Galleries in England_ (Pictures at Oxford and
- Blenheim). It was bought by Parliament from the Duke of
- Marlborough in 1885, and is now in the National Gallery.
-
- _The Waterloo Exhibition._ The Waterloo Museum in Pall Mall
- ‘which now (according to the advertisement) presents to public
- view upwards of 1000 mementos of the late extraordinary events
- upon the Continent.’
-
- ‘_From this time forth_,’ _etc._ _Othello_, Act V. Scene 2.
-
- _The English are a shopkeeping nation._ Hazlitt probably refers
- to the exclamation of Barère said to have been repeated by
- Napoleon. The expression seems to have been first used by Dean
- Tucker of Gloucester in a _Tract_ of 1766.
-
- ‘_Balm of hurt minds_,’ _etc._ _Macbeth_, Act II. Scene 2.
-
- 151. ‘_Smoothing the raven down_,’ _etc._ _Comus_, 251–252.
-
-
- ON POETICAL VERSATILITY
-
-This fragment is taken from the third of a series of four ‘Illustrations
-of the Times Newspaper,’ which Hazlitt contributed to _The Examiner_
-under the heading of ‘Literary Notices.’ The first of these four papers
-(Dec. 1, 1816) has not been republished; the other three, dated
-respectively December 15, 1816, December 22, 1816, and January 12, 1817,
-were published in _Political Essays_.
-
- PAGE
-
- 151. ‘_Heaven’s own tinct._’ _Cymbeline_, Act II. Scene 2.
-
- ‘_Being so majestical_,’ _etc._ _Hamlet_, Act I. Scene 1.
-
- 152. _Poets, it has been said._ See _Political Essays_ (Mr. Southey’s
- New Year’s Ode).
-
- _They do not like_, _etc._ The reference is to Southey, Poet
- Laureate, and Wordsworth, distributor of stamps for the county
- of Westmoreland.
-
-
- ON ACTORS AND ACTING
-
-This essay and the next are based upon the last (No. 48) of the Round
-Table series, which appeared in _The Examiner_ for Jan. 5, 1817. Hazlitt
-has, however, interpolated into both essays various passages from former
-theatrical criticisms. The paper in the _Round Table_ appears to have
-been inspired by Colley Cibber’s _Apology for his Life_. A general
-reference may here be made to that work, to the volume in the present
-edition containing Hazlitt’s dramatic criticisms, and to Lamb’s and
-Leigh Hunt’s essays on the stage.
-
- PAGE
-
- 153. ‘_The abstracts_,’ _etc._ _Hamlet_, Act II. Scene 2.
-
- 154. _George Barnwell._ By George Lillo (1693–1739), produced at Drury
- Lane Theatre on June 22, 1731. The play was frequently revived,
- and was in some places acted annually as a moral lesson to
- apprentices.
-
- _The Inconstant._ Farquhar’s comedy (1702). _Orinda_ should be
- _Oriana_.
-
- _Mr. Liston._ John Liston (1776?-1846),the comic actor, who made
- his first appearance in 1805 and retired in 1837.
-
- 155. _Sir George Etherege_ (1635?-1691), the dramatist. See _English
- Comic Writers_, where a part of this passage is repeated.
-
- _John Kemble._ John Philip Kemble (1757–1823). Hazlitt wrote an
- account of his retirement from the stage, which took place at
- Covent Garden on June 23, 1817.
-
- _Pierre._ In Otway’s _Venice Preserved_ (1682), ‘one of the
- happiest and most spirited of all Mr. Kemble’s performances’
- (_A View of the English Stage_).
-
- _The Stranger._ Benjamin Thompson’s (1776?-1816) play, ‘The
- Stranger,’ translated from Kotzebue, was produced in 1798,
- Kemble playing the title-rôle. See Hazlitt’s essay on ‘Mr.
- Kemble’s Retirement.’
-
- ‘_A tale of other times._’ ‘A tale of the times of old!’ the
- opening words of Macpherson’s _Ossian_.
-
- _One of the most affecting things_, _etc._ This paragraph is
- taken from a ‘Theatrical Examiner’ (June 4, 1815) on the
- retirement of John Bannister (1760–1836) from the stage. For
- Bannister and Richard Suett (1755–1805) see Hazlitt’s essay ‘On
- Play-Going and on Some of our old Actors,’ and Lamb’s ‘On Some
- of the old Actors.’
-
- _The Prize._ By Prince Hoare (1755–1834), originally produced in
- 1793.
-
- _Mrs. Storace._ Anna Selina Storace or Storache (1766–1817), the
- singer and actress, played in ‘The Prize’ in 1793.
-
- _My Grandmother._ By Prince Hoare, produced in 1793.
-
- _The Son-in-Law._ A comic opera by John O’Keeffe (1747–1833),
- produced in 1779.
-
- _Scrub._ In _The Beaux’ Stratagem_ of Farquhar.
-
- Thomas King (1730–1805), the original Sir Peter Teazle; William
- Parsons (1736–1795); James William Dodd (1740–1796); John Quick
- (1748–1831), who made his last appearance in 1813; and John
- Edwin the elder (1749–1790). See Hazlitt’s essay ‘On Play-Going
- and Some of our old Actors.’
-
- 156. ‘_All the world’s a stage_’ _etc._ _As You Like It_, Act II.
- Scene 7.
-
-
- THE SAME SUBJECT CONTINUED
-
-A large part of the first paragraph of this essay appeared originally in
-a notice of Kean’s Sir Giles Overreach (‘Theatrical Examiner,’ Jan. 14,
-1816). See _A View of the English Stage_.
-
- PAGE
-
- 156. ‘_Leaving the world no copy._’ _Twelfth Night_, Act I. Scene 5.
-
- _Colley Cibber’s account._ See Chap. iv. of Cibber’s _Apology_.
-
- _Miss O’Neill._ Eliza O’Neill (1791–1872) made her last
- appearance on the stage on July 13, 1819, shortly before her
- marriage with Mr. Becher, who afterwards became a baronet.
- Hazlitt in an article on her retirement (see _A View of the
- English Stage_) said that ‘her excellence (unrivalled by any
- actress since Mrs. Siddons) consisted in truth of nature and
- force of passion.’
-
- _Mrs. Siddons._ Sarah Siddons (1755–1831) appeared without
- success in London in 1775 and 1776, gained a great reputation
- in Manchester and Bath, and reappeared in London on October 10,
- 1782 in Garrick’s _Isabella_, a version of Southerne’s _Fatal
- Marriage_. After a long series of triumphs she made her
- farewell appearance on June 29, 1812, as Lady Macbeth.
- Hazlitt’s notices of her are confined to two of the occasional
- benefit performances which she gave before she finally retired
- in June 1819. See _A View of the English Stage_ (June 15, 1816,
- and June 7, 1817).
-
- 157. ‘_We have seen what a ferment_,’ _etc._ See the essays above, ‘On
- the Catalogue Raisonné of the British Institution.’
-
- _Betterton_, _etc._ Thomas Betterton (1635?-1710); Barton Booth
- (1681–1733); Robert Wilks (1665?-1732); Samuel Sandford, a
- well-known actor on the Restoration stage, who died early in
- the eighteenth century; James Nokes (_d._ 1692); Anthony Leigh
- (_d._ 1692); William Pinkethman (_d._ 1724); William Bullock
- (_d._ 1740?); Richard Estcourt (1668–1712); Thomas Dogget (_d._
- 1721): Elizabeth Barry (1658–1713); Susanna Mountfort, the
- daughter of William Mountfort, the actor and dramatist, who was
- murdered by Captain Hill and Lord Mohun in 1692; Anne Oldfield
- (1683–1730); Anne Bracegirdle (1663?-1748), who retired from
- the stage in 1707 after being defeated in a competition with
- Mrs. Oldfield; Susannah Maria Cibber (1714–1766), sister of
- Arne the composer, and wife of Theophilus Cibber, famous first
- as a singer (especially of Handel’s music), and later as an
- actress of tragedy.
-
- _Cibber himself._ Colley Cibber (1671–1757), actor and dramatist,
- Poet Laureate from 1730 till his death. For a very entertaining
- account of himself and of nearly all the well-known actors and
- actresses whose names appear in the preceding note see his
- _Apology for his Life_ (1740).
-
- _Macklin_, _etc._ Charles Macklin (1697?-1797), actor and
- dramatist, whose great part was Shylock; James Quin
- (1693–1766); John Rich (1682–1761), the originator of pantomime
- in England (his name is substituted by Hazlitt for that of Peg
- Woffington, which appeared in the original _Round Table_
- paper); Catherine or Kitty Clive (1711–1785), whose acting and
- ‘sprightliness of humour’ were admired by Dr. Johnson, and
- Hannah Pritchard (1711–1768), who created the part of Irene in
- Johnson’s play, and Frances Abington (1737–1815), well-known
- members of Garrick’s company; Thomas Weston (1737–1776), and
- Edward Shuter (1728–1776), two of the best comic actors of
- their time.
-
- ‘_Gladdened life_,’ _etc._ A composite quotation from Johnson’s
- well-known reference to Garrick (_Lives of the Poets_, Edmund
- Smith). See Boswell’s _Life of Johnson_, ed. G. B. Hill, iii.
- 387.
-
- _Our hundred days._ The reference is a characteristic one to
- Buonaparte’s hundred days in Europe in 1815.
-
- _Betterton’s Hamlet or his Brutus_, _etc._ Colley Cibber
- (_Apology_, Chap, iv.) refers particularly to these two
- impersonations, describes (Chap. xiv.) Booth’s performance of
- Cato in 1713, and specially eulogises Mrs. Barry’s Monimia
- and Belvidera in Otway’s plays, _The Orphan_ and _Venice
- Preserved_. (Chap. v.). See Hazlitt’s lecture ‘On the Spirit
- of Ancient and Modern Literature’ in his _Lectures on the
- Literature of the Age of Elizabeth_ for a criticism of these
- plays. He saw and reviewed Miss O’Neill’s performances in
- both these characters. See _A View of the English Stage_.
-
- _Penkethman’s manner_, _etc._ See _The Tatler_, No. 188.
-
- _Dowton._ Hazlitt spoke of William Dowton (1764–1851) as ‘a
- genuine and excellent comedian’ (‘On Play-Going and on Some of
- the old Actors’). There are frequent notices of him in _A View
- of the English Stage_.
-
- 157. Note. _Marriage à la mode._ By Dryden, first produced in 1672. In
- _The Examiner_ this note forms part of the text. At the end of
- the passage quoted Hazlitt proceeds: ‘The whole of Colley
- Cibber’s work is very amusing to a dramatic amateur. It gives
- an interesting account of the progress of the stage, which in
- his time appears to have been in a state _militant_. Two
- actors, _Kynaston_ and _Montfort_ were run through the body in
- disputes with gentlemen, with impunity; and the Master of the
- Revels arrested any of the two companies who was refractory to
- the managers, at his pleasure. _Dogget_ was brought up in this
- manner from Norwich, by two constables: but _Dogget_ being a
- whig, and a surly fellow, got a _Habeas Corpus_, and the Master
- of the Revels was driven from the field.’ Edward Kynaston
- (1640–1706) was beaten more than once at the instance of Sir
- Charles Sedley whom he impersonated on the stage. For the story
- of the Lord Chamberlain and Dogget, see Cibber’s _Apology_
- (Chap. x.).
-
- 158. _Sir Harry Wildair._ Farquhar’s _Sir Harry Wildair_, a
- continuation of _The Constant Couple_, was produced in 1701.
-
- ‘_The Jew that Shakespeare drew._’ This is an exclamation
- (attributed to Pope) overheard at one of Macklin’s
- representations of Shylock.
-
- _As often as we are pleased._ The following passage from _The
- Examiner_ is omitted by Hazlitt: ‘We have no curiosity about
- things or persons that we never heard of. Mr. Coleridge
- professes in his Lay Sermon to have discovered a new faculty,
- by which he can divine the future. This is lucky for himself
- and his friends, who seem to have lost all recollection of the
- past.’ Hazlitt here refers to _The Statesman’s Manual; or, The
- Bible the best guide to political skill and foresight: A Lay
- Sermon, addressed to the Higher Classes of Society_ (1816),
- known as the first Lay Sermon. Hazlitt wrote two notices of it
- in _The Examiner_, one of which (September 8, 1816) was based
- merely on newspaper announcements of its forthcoming appearance
- (see _Political Essays_); and probably, as Coleridge believed,
- reviewed it in the _Edinburgh Review_ for December 1816.
-
- _Players, after all_, _etc._ This passage to the end of the
- paragraph is from a ‘Theatrical Examiner,’ January 14, 1816.
-
- _Actors have been accused_, _etc._ The whole of this paragraph is
- taken from a ‘Theatrical Examiner,’ March 31, 1816.
-
- ‘_The web of our life_,’ _etc._ _All’s Well that Ends Well_, Act
- IV. Scene 3.
-
- 159. ‘_Like the giddy sailor_,’ _etc._ _Richard III._, Act III. Scene
- 4.
-
- _A neighbouring country._ Hazlitt probably refers to France where
- the disqualifications of actors had only recently been removed
- by the Revolution government. For an account of ecclesiastical
- intolerance towards actors, especially in France, see Lecky’s
- _The Rise and Influence of Rationalism in Europe_, II. 316 _et
- seq._
-
- ‘_A consummation_,’ _etc._ _Hamlet_, Act III. Scene 1.
-
- ‘_The wine of life_,’ _etc._ _Macbeth_, Act II. Scene 3.
-
- 160. ‘_Hurried from fierce extremes_,’ _etc._
-
- ‘——and feel by turns the bitter change
- Of fierce extremes, extremes by change more fierce,’ etc.
-
- _Paradise Lost_, II. 599 _et seq._
-
- _The strolling player in ‘Gil Blas.’_ _Gil Blas_, Liv. II. Chap.
- viii.
-
-
- WHY THE ARTS ARE NOT PROGRESSIVE: A FRAGMENT
-
-In _The Morning Chronicle_ for January 11 and 15, 1814, Hazlitt
-published two papers entitled ‘Fragments on Art. Why the Arts are not
-progressive?’ Later in the year he contributed two papers to _The
-Champion_ (August 28, 1814, and September 11, 1814) under the heading
-‘Fine Arts. Whether they are promoted by Academies and Public
-Institutions?’ and in a letter (October 2) replied to the criticisms of
-a correspondent. The present ‘Fragment’ is composed of (1) the first of
-the articles in _The Morning Chronicle_ and part of the second, and (2)
-part of the second article in _The Champion_. Much of the matter of the
-present essay is embodied in Hazlitt’s article on the Fine Arts,
-contributed to the _Encyclopædia Britannica_.
-
- PAGE
-
- 160. ‘_It is often made a subject_,’ _etc._ The first three paragraphs
- are taken from _The Morning Chronicle_, January 11, 1814. In
- _The Champion_ for August 28, 1814, the first two paragraphs
- appear as a quotation from a ‘contemporary critic.’
-
- _Antæus._ The story of Antæus the giant is referred to by Milton
- (_Paradise Regained_, IV. 563 _et seq._).
-
- 161. _Nothing is more contrary_, _etc._ This paragraph and part of the
- next are repeated at the beginning of the Lecture on Shakspeare
- and Milton in _Lectures on the English Poets_.
-
- 162. _Guido._ Substituted for Claude Lorraine, upon whom, in _The
- Morning Chronicle_, Hazlitt has the following note: ‘In
- speaking thus of Claude, we yield rather to common opinion than
- to our own. However inferior the style of his best landscapes
- may be, there is something in the execution that redeems all
- defects. In taste and grace nothing can ever go beyond them. He
- might be called, if not the perfect, the faultless painter. Sir
- Joshua Reynolds used to say, that there would be another
- Raphael, before there was another Claude. In Mr. Northcote’s
- Dream of a Painter (see his _Memoirs of Sir Joshua Reynolds_),
- there is an account of Claude Lorraine, so full of feeling, so
- picturesque, so truly classical, so like Claude, that we cannot
- resist this opportunity of copying it out.’ The passage quoted
- from Northcote is the paragraph beginning, ‘Now tired with pomp
- and splendid shew.’ See Northcote’s Varieties on Art (The Dream
- of a Painter) in his _Memoirs of Sir Joshua Reynolds_, _etc._
- (1813–1815) p. xvi.
-
- ‘_The human face divine._’ _Paradise Lost_, III. 44.
-
- ‘_Circled Una’s angel face_,’ _etc._ _The Faerie Queene_, Book I.
- Canto iii. st. 4.
-
- _Griselda._ See _The Canterbury Tales_ (The Clerk’s Tale).
-
- _The Flower and the Leaf._ This poem, a great favourite of
- Hazlitt’s, is not now attributed to Chaucer.
-
- 163. _The divine story of the Hawk._ _The Decameron_ (Fifth Day, Novel
- IX.). Hazlitt continually refers to the story.
-
- _Isabella._ _The Decameron_ (Fourth Day, Novel V.).
-
- _So Lear_, _etc._ _King Lear_, Act II. Scene 4.
-
- _Titian._ The picture referred to is one of those which Hazlitt
- copied while he was studying in the Louvre in 1802. See
- _Memoirs of William Hazlitt_, I. 88. He frequently mentions it.
-
- _Nicolas Poussin._ ‘But, above all, who shall celebrate, in terms
- of fit praise, his picture of the shepherds in the Vale of
- Tempe going out in a fine morning of the spring, and coming to
- a tomb with this inscription:—Et ego in Arcadia vixi!’ (_Table
- Talk_, ‘On a Landscape of Nicolas Poussin.’)
-
- _In general, it must happen_, _etc._ The two concluding
- paragraphs are taken from _The Champion_, September 11, 1814.
-
- _Current with the world._ The following passage in _The Champion_
- is here omitted: ‘Common sense, which has been sometimes
- appealed to as the criterion of taste, is nothing but the
- common capacity, applied to common facts and feelings; but it
- neither is nor pretends to be, the judge of anything else. To
- suppose that it can really appreciate the excellence of works
- of high art, is as absurd as to suppose that it could produce
- them.’
-
- _Count Castiglione._ Baldassare Count Castiglione (1478–1529),
- whose famous _Il Cortegiano_ was translated into English by Sir
- Thomas Hoby under the title of ‘The Courtyer’ (1561).
-
-
- CHARACTERS OF SHAKESPEAR’S PLAYS
-
- PAGE
-
- 171. _It is observed by Mr. Pope._ Ed. Elwin and Courthope, vol. X.
- pp. 534–535.
-
- _A gentleman of the name of Mason._ Neither George Mason
- (1735–1806), author of _An Essay on Design in Gardening_, 1768,
- nor John Monck Mason (1726–1809), Shakespearian commentator, is
- the author of the work alluded to by Hazlitt, but Thomas
- Whately (_d._ 1772) whose _Remarks on some of the Characters of
- Shakespere_ was published after Thomas Whately’s death by his
- brother, the Rev. Jos. Whately, in 1785, as ‘by the author of
- _Observations on Modern Gardening_’ [1770]; a second edition
- was published in 1808 with the author’s name on the title-page,
- and a third in 1839, edited by Archbishop Whately, Thomas
- Whately’s nephew.
-
- _Richardson’s Essays._ _Essays on Shakespeare’s Dramatic
- Characters._ 1774–1812. By William Richardson (1743–1814).
-
- _Schlegel’s Lectures on the Drama._ _A Course of Lectures on
- Dramatic Art and Literature._ By A. W. von Schlegel. Delivered
- at Vienna in 1808. English translation, by John Black, in 1815.
- The quotation which follows will be found in Bohn’s one vol.
- edition, 1846, pp. 363–371, and the further references given in
- these notes are to the same edition.
-
- 174. ‘_to do a great right._’ _Mer. Ven._ IV. 1.
-
- ‘_alone is high fantastical._’ _Twelfth Night_, I. 1.
-
- 175. _Dr. Johnson’s Preface to his Edition of Shakespear._ 1765.
-
- ‘_swelling figures._’ Dr. Johnson’s _Preface_. See Malone’s
- _Shakespeare_, 1821, vol. i. p. 75.
-
- 176. _Dover cliff in_ LEAR, Act IV. 6.
-
- _flowers in_ THE WINTER’S TALE, Act IV. 4.
-
- _Congreve’s description of a ruin in the_ MOURNING BRIDE, Act II.
- 1.
-
- 177. _the sleepy eye of love._ Cf. ‘The sleepy eye that spoke the
- melting soul.’ Pope, _Imit. 1st Epis. 2nd. Bk. Horace_, l. 150.
-
- _In his tragic scenes._ Dr. Johnson’s _Preface_, p. 71.
-
- _His declamations_, _etc._ _Ibid._, p. 75.
-
- _But the admirers_, _etc._ _Ibid._, p. 75.
-
- 178. _in another work, The Round Table._ See pp. 61–64.
-
-
- CYMBELINE
-
-When the name of the Play is not given it is to be understood that the
-reference is to the Play under discussion. Differences between the text
-quoted by Hazlitt and the text of the _Globe_ Shakespeare which seem
-worth pointing out are indicated in square brackets.
-
- PAGE
-
- 179. _Dr. Johnson is of opinion._ Dr. Johnson’s _Preface_, p. 73.
-
- 180. _Cibber, in speaking of the early English stage._ _Apology for
- the Life of Mr. Colley Cibber_ (1740), vol. i. chap. iv.
-
- 181. _My lord_, Act I. 6.
-
- _What cheer_, Act III. 4. The six following quotations in the
- text are in the same scene.
-
- 182. _My dear lord_, Act III. 6.
-
- _And when with wild wood-leaves_ and _with fairest flowers_, Act
- IV. 2.
-
- 183. _Cytherea, how bravely_, Act II. 2.
-
- _Me of my lawful pleasure_, Act II. 5.
-
- _Whose love-suit_, Act III. 4.
-
- _the ancient critic_, Aristophanes of Byzantium.
-
- 184. _Out of your proof_, Act III. 3.
-
- 185. _The game’s a-foot_ [is up], Act III. 3.
-
- _under the shade._ _As You Like It_, Act II. 7.
-
- _See, boys!_ Act III. 3.
-
- _Nay, Cadwell_, Act IV. 2.
-
- 186. _Stick to your journal course_, Act IV. 2.
-
- _creatures_ and _Your Highness_, Act I. 5.
-
-
- MACBETH
-
- 186. _The poet’s eye._ _A Midsummer Night’s Dream_, Act V. 1.
-
- your only _tragedy-maker_. It would be better to italicise only
- ‘tragedy’; the reference is probably to _Hamlet_, III. 2, ‘your
- only jig-maker.’
-
- _the air_ [heaven’s breath] _smells wooingly_ and _the
- temple-haunting martlet builds_ [does approve by his loved
- mansionry], Act I. 6.
-
- 187. _the blasted heath_, Act I. 3.
-
- _air-drawn dagger_, Act III. 4.
-
- _gracious Duncan_, Act III. 1.
-
- _blood-boultered Banquo_, Act IV. 1.
-
- _What are these_, Act I. 3.
-
- _bends up_, Act I. 7.
-
- _The deed_ [The attempt and not the deed confounds us], Act II.
- 2.
-
- _preter_ [super] _natural solicitings_, Act I. 3.
-
- 188. _Bring forth_ and _screw his courage_, Act I. 7.
-
- _lost so poorly_ and _a little water_, Act II. 2.
-
- _the sides of his intent_, Act I. 7.
-
- _for their future days_ and _his fatal entrance_, Act I. 5.
-
- _Come all you spirits_, Act I. 5.
-
- 189. _Duncan comes there_, Act I. 5. The two following quotations in
- the text are in the same scene.
-
- _Mrs. Siddons._ Sarah Siddons (1755–1831). It was as Lady Macbeth
- that Mrs. Siddons made her ‘last’ appearance on the stage, June
- 29, 1812. She returned occasionally, and Hazlitt saw her act
- the part at Covent Garden, June 7, 1817. See note to p. 156,
- and also Hazlitt’s _A View of the English Stage_.
-
- 190. _There is no art_, Act I. 4.
-
- _How goes the night_, Act II. 1.
-
- _Light thickens_, Act III. 2–3.
-
- 191. _So fair and foul_, Act I. 3.
-
- _Such welcome and unwelcome news together_ [things at once] and
- _Men’s lives_, Act IV. 3.
-
- _Look like the innocent flower_, Act I. 5.
-
- _To him and all_ [all and him], _Avaunt_, and _himself again_,
- Act III. 4.
-
- _he may sleep_, Act IV. 1.
-
- _Then be thou jocund_, Act III. 2.
-
- _Had he not resembled_, Act II. 2.
-
- _they should be women_, and _in deeper consequence_, Act I. 3.
-
- 192. _Why stands Macbeth_, Act IV. 1.
-
- _the milk of human kindness_, Act I. 5.
-
- _himself alone._ _The Third Part of King Henry VI._, Act V. 6.
-
- _For Banquo’s issue_, Act III. 1.
-
- 193. _Duncan is in his grave_, Act III. 2.
-
- _direness is thus rendered familiar_, Act V. 5.
-
- _is troubled_, Act V. 3.
-
- _subject_ [servile] _to all the skyey influences_. _Measure for
- Measure_, Act III. 1.
-
- _My way of life_, Act V. 3.
-
- 194. _the ‘Beggar’s Opera,’_ by John Gay (1685–1732), first acted
- January 29, 1728. See _The Round Table_, pp. 65–66.
-
- _Lillo’s murders._ George Lillo, dramatist (1693–1739), author of
- _Fatal Curiosity_ and _George Barnwell_. See note to p. 154.
-
- _Lamb’s Specimens of Early [English] Dramatic Poets_, 1808. See
- Gollancz’s edition, 2 vols., 1893, vol. I. pp. 271–272.
-
- _the Witch of Middleton._ Thomas Middleton (?1570–1627). It is
- not known whether the date of the _Witch_ is earlier or later
- than that of _Macbeth_.
-
-
- JULIUS CÆSAR
-
- 195. _the celebrated Earl of Hallifax._ Charles Montague, Earl of
- Halifax (1661–1715), poet and statesman. _King and no King_,
- licensed 1611, printed 1619; _Secret Love, or, the Maiden
- Queen_, first acted 1667, printed the following year.
-
- _Thou art a cobler_ [but with awl. I] and _Wherefore rejoice_,
- Act I. 1.
-
- 196. _once upon a raw_ and _The games are done_, Act I. 2.
-
- 197. _And for Mark Antony_, and _O, name him not_, Act II. 1.
-
- 198. _This disturbed sky_, Act I. 3.
-
- _All the conspirators_, Act V. 5.
-
- _How ‘scaped I killing_, Act IV. 3.
-
- _You are my true_, Act II. 1.
-
- 199. _They are all welcome_ and _It is no matter_, Act II. 1.
-
-
- OTHELLO
-
- 200. _tragedy purifies the affections by terror and pity_, Aristotle’s
- _Poetics_.
-
- _It comes directly home_, Dedication to Bacon’s _Essays_.
-
- _The picturesque contrasts._ The germ of this paragraph may be
- found in _The Examiner_ (_The Round Table_, No. 38), May 12th,
- 1816. The paper there indexed as _Shakespeare’s exact
- discrimination of nearly similar characters_ was used in the
- preparation of _Othello_, _Henry IV._ and _Henry VI._ in the
- _Characters of Shakespear’s Plays_.
-
- 202. _flows on to the Propontic_, Act III. 3.
-
- _the spells_, Act I. 3.
-
- _What! Michael Cassio?_ and _If she be false_, Act III. 3.
-
- 203. _Look where he comes_, Act III. 3. The four following quotations
- in the text and footnote are in the same scene.
-
- [I found not Cassio’s kisses
- ... thy hollow cell.]
-
- _Yet, oh the pity of it_, Act IV. 2.
-
- _My wife!_ Act V. 2.
-
- 204. _his whole course of love_, Act I. 3.
-
- _’Tis not to make me jealous_, Act III. 3.
-
- _Believe me_, Act III. 4.
-
- _I will, my Lord_, Act IV. 3.
-
- 205. _her visage._ Cf. ‘I saw Othello’s visage in his mind,’ Act I. 3.
-
- _A maiden never bold_, Act I. 3.
-
- _Tempests themselves_, Act II. 1.
-
- 205. _She is subdued_ and _honours and his valiant parts_, Act I. 3.
-
- _Ay, too gentle_, Act IV. 1.
-
- _remained at home_, Act I. 3.
-
- _Alas, Iago_, Act IV. 2.
-
- 206. _Would you had never seen him_, Act IV. 3.
-
- _Some persons._ See _The Round Table_, p. 15.
-
- 207. _Our ancient_, Dram. Per. ‘Iago, his ancient.’
-
- _What a full fortune_, and _Here is her father’s house_, Act I.
- 1.
-
- 208. _I cannot believe_, Act II. 1.
-
- _And yet how nature_, Act III. 3.
-
- _the milk of human kindness._ _Macbeth_, Act I. 5.
-
- _relish of salvation._ _Hamlet_, Act III. 3.
-
- _Oh, you are well tuned now_, Act II. 1.
-
- _My noble lord_, Act III. 3.
-
- 209. _O grace! O Heaven forgive_ [defend] _me_, Act III. 3.
-
- _How is it, General_, Act IV. 1.
-
- _Zanga._ See _The Revenge_, by Edward Young (1683–1765), first
- acted 1721.
-
-
- TIMON OF ATHENS
-
- 210. _Follow his strides_, Act I. 1.
-
- 211. _What, think’st thou_, Act IV. 3 [moss’d trees].
-
- _A thing slipt_, Act I. 1.
-
- _Ugly all over with hypocrisy._ Cf. ‘He is ugly all over with the
- affectation of the fine gentleman.’ Quoted by Steele from
- Wycherley, _The Tatler_, No. 38.
-
- 212. _This yellow slave_, Act IV. 3.
-
- _Let me look_, Act IV. 1.
-
- 213. _What things in the world_, Act IV. 3.
-
- _loved few things better_, Act I. 1.
-
- _Come not to me_, Act V. 1.
-
- _These well express_, Act V. 4.
-
-
- CORIOLANUS
-
- 214. _no jutting frieze_ and _to make its pendant bed_. _Macbeth_, Act
- I. 6.
-
- _it carries noise_, Act II. 1.
-
- _Carnage is its daughter._ See Wordsworth’s _Ode_, No. XLV. of
- Poems dedicated to National Independence and Liberty, ed.
- Hutchinson, 1895. The line was altered by Wordsworth in 1845.
- See also Byron’s _Don Juan_, Canto viii. Stanza 9.
-
- 215. _poor_ [these] _rats_, Act I. 1.
-
- _as if he were a God_, Act II. 1.
-
- _Mark you_ and _cares_, Act III. 1.
-
- 216. _Now the red pestilence_, Act IV. 1.
-
- 217. _Methinks I hither hear_, Act I. 3 [At Grecian sword,
- contemning].
-
- _These are the ushers_, Act II. 1.
-
- _Pray now, no more_, Act I. 9.
-
- 218. _The whole history._ The sentence quoted is by Pope. See Malone’s
- _Shakespeare_, 1821, vol. xiv.
-
-
- TROILUS AND CRESSIDA
-
- 221. _Troy, yet upon her basis_, Act I. 3.
-
- 222. _without o’erflowing full._ Said of the Thames in _Cooper’s
- Hill_, by Sir John Denham (1615–1669).
-
- 222. _of losing distinction in his thoughts_ [joys] and _As doth a
- battle_, Act III. 2.
-
- 223. _Time hath, my lord_, Act. III. 3.
-
- 224. _Why there you touch’d_, Act II. 2.
-
- _Come here about me_, Act V. 7.
-
- _Go thy way_, Act I. 2.
-
- _It is the prettiest villain_, Act III. 2.
-
- 225. _the web of our lives._ _All’s Well that Ends Well_, Act IV. 3.
-
- _He hath done_, Act V. 5.
-
- 226. _Prouder than when_, Act I. 3.
-
- _like the eye of vassalage_, Act III. 2 [like vassalage at
- unawares encountering the eye of majesty].
-
- _And as the new abashed nightingale_, Chaucer’s _Troilus and
- Criseyde_, Book III. 177.
-
- 227. _Her armes small._ _Ibid._, 179.
-
- _O that I thought_, Act III. 2.
-
- _Rouse yourself_, Act III. 3.
-
- _What proffer’st thou_, Chaucer’s _Troilus and Criseyde_, Book
- III. 209.
-
-
- ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA
-
- 228. _like the swan’s down-feather_, Act III. 2.
-
- _If it be love indeed_, Act I. 1.
-
- 229. _The barge she sat in_, Act II. 2.
-
- _like a doating mallard_, Act III. 10.
-
- _He’s speaking now_, Act I. 5.
-
- _It is my birthday_ and _To let a fellow_, Act. III. 13.
-
- _Age cannot wither_, Act. II. 2 [stale].
-
- _There’s gold_, Act. II. 5.
-
- 230. _Dost thou not see_, Act V. 2.
-
- _Antony, leave thy lascivious wassels_, Act I. 4. [_For_ Mutina
- _read_ Modena.]
-
- _Yes, yes_, Act III. 11.
-
- 231. _Eros, thou yet behold’st me_, Act IV. 14.
-
- _I see men’s judgments_, Act III. 13.
-
- 232. _a master-leaver_, Act IV. 9.
-
-
- HAMLET
-
- 232. _this goodly frame_ and _man delighted not_, Act II. 2.
-
- _too much i’ th’ sun._ Cf. Act II. 2.
-
- _the pangs of despised love_, Act III. 1.
-
- 233. _the outward pageants._ Cf. the trappings and the suits of woe,
- Act I. 2.
-
- _we have that within_, Act I. 2.
-
- 234. _that has no relish of salvation_ and _He kneels and prays_ [now
- might I do it pat, now he is praying], Act III. 3.
-
- _How all occasions_, Act IV. 4 [fust in us].
-
- 235. _Whole Duty of Man_, 1659, a once-popular ethical treatise of
- unknown authorship.
-
- _Academy of Compliments, or the whole Art of Courtship, being the
- rarest and most exact way of wooing a Maid or Widow, by the way
- of Dialogue or complimental Expressions._ London, 12mo.
- Academies of Compliments were also published in 1655 and 1669.
-
- 236. _his father’s spirit_, Act I. 2.
-
- _I loved Ophelia_ and _Sweets to the sweet_, Act V. 1.
-
- _Oh rose of May_, Act IV. 5.
-
- _There is a willow_, Act IV. 7 [grows aslant].
-
- 237. _a wave o’ th’ sea._ _The Winter’s Tale_, Act IV. 4.
-
-
- THE TEMPEST
-
- 238. _Either for tragedy._ _Hamlet_, Act II. 2. Hazlitt alters the
- words of Polonius to apply them to Shakespeare.
-
- _a deed without a name._ _Macbeth_, Act IV. 1.
-
- _does his spiriting gently_, Act I. 2.
-
- _to airy nothing._ _A Midsummer Night’s Dream_, Act V. 1.
-
- _semblably._ _The Second Part of King Henry VI._, Act V. 1.
-
- _worthy of that name._ Cf. Act III. 1.
-
- 239. _like the dyer’s hand._ _Sonnet_ CXI.
-
- ‘_the liberty of wit_’ ... _‘the law’ of the understanding_. Cf.
- _Hamlet_, Act II. 2 [the law of writ and the liberty].
-
- _of the earth, earthy._ _St. John_, iii. 31.
-
- _always speaks in blank verse_, Schlegel, p. 395.
-
- _As wicked dew_, Act I. 2.
-
- 240. _I’ll shew thee_, Act II. 2.
-
- _Be not afraid_, Act III. 2.
-
- 241. _I drink the air_, Act V. 1.
-
- _I’ll put a girdle_, _A Midsummer Night’s Dream_, Act II. 2.
-
- _Your charm_, Act V. 1.
-
- _Come unto these yellow sands_, Act I. 2.
-
- 242. _The cloud-capp’d towers_, Act IV. 1.
-
- _Ye elves of hills_, Act V. 1.
-
- 243. _Shakespear has anticipated._ The passage quoted is based on
- Florio’s translation of Montaigne. See Chapter XXX. Book 1. _Of
- the Caniballes_.
-
- _Had I the plantation_, Act II. 1.
-
-
- THE MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM
-
-See _The Round Table_, pp. 61–64.
-
- 244. _This crew of patches_, Act III. 2.
-
- _He will roar_, Act I. 2. The two following quotations in the
- text are in the same scene.
-
- _I believe we must leave_, Act III. 1.
-
- 245. _Write me a prologue_, Act III. 1.
-
- _with amiable cheeks_ and _Monsieur Cobweb_, Act IV. 1.
-
- _Lord, what fools_, Act III. 2.
-
- _the human mortals_, Act II. 1.
-
- _gorgons and hydras._ _Paradise Lost_, Book II. l. 628.
-
- _regarded him rather as a metaphysician._ Cf. ‘No man was ever
- yet a great poet, without being at the same time a profound
- philosopher.’ Coleridge’s _Biographia Literaria_, Chap. XV.
-
- 246. _Be kind_, Act III. 1.
-
- _Go, one of you_, Act IV. 1.
-
- 247. _the most fearful wild-fowl_, Act III. 1.
-
- 247. _Liston_ acted in _A Midsummer Night’s Dream_ at Covent Garden,
- January 17, 1816. See Genest’s _Some Account of the English
- Stage_, VIII. 545–549. See also Hazlitt’s _A View of the
- English Stage_, where a few of the same sentences used here
- also occur.
-
-
- ROMEO AND JULIET
-
- 248. _whatever is most intoxicating_, Schlegel, p. 400.
-
- _fancies_ [cowslips] _wan_. _Lycidas_, l. 147.
-
- 249. _We have heard it objected._ By Curran. See _post_, p. 393.
-
- _too unripe and crude._ Cf. _Lycidas_, l. 3, ‘harsh and crude.’
-
- _the_ STRANGER. _Menschenhass und Reue_, by A.F.F. von Kotzebue
- (1761–1819), adapted for the English stage under the title of
- _The Stranger_. See note to p. 155.
-
- _gather grapes._ _St. Matthew_, vii. 16.
-
- _My bounty_, Act II. 2.
-
- 250. _they fade by degrees_, Wordsworth’s Ode, _Intimations of
- Immortality from Recollections of early Childhood_, V. [fade
- into the light].
-
- _that lies about us._ _Ibid._
-
- 251. _the purple light of love_, Gray’s _Progress of Poesy_, l. 41.
-
- _another morn risen on mid-day_ [mid-noon], _Paradise Lost_, V.
- 310–311.
-
- _in utter nakedness_, Wordsworth’s _Ode_ (see above), V.
-
- _I’ve seen the day_, Act I. 5.
-
- _At my poor house_, Act I. 2.
-
- _But he_, Act I. 1.
-
- 252. _the white wonder_, Act III. 3.
-
- _What lady’s that_, Act I. 5.
-
- _But stronger Shakespear felt for man alone_, Collins’s _Epistle
- to Sir Thomas Hanmer_.
-
- _Thou know’st the mask_, Act II. 2.
-
- 253. _calls_ [think] _true love spoken_ [acted] and _Gallop apace_,
- Act III. 2.
-
- _It was reserved_, Schlegel, p. 400.
-
- 254. _Here comes the lady_, Act II. 6.
-
- _Ancient damnation_, Act III. 5.
-
- _frail thoughts._ _Lycidas_, 153 [false surmise].
-
- _the flatteries_, Act V. 1.
-
- _What said my man_, Act V. 3.
-
- _If I may trust_, Act V. 1 [flattering truth of sleep].
-
- 255. _Shame come to Romeo_ and _Blister’d be thy tongue_, Act III. 2.
-
- 256. _father, mother_, Act III. 2.
-
- _Let me peruse_, Act V. 3.
-
- 257. _as she would take_ [catch]. _Antony and Cleopatra_, Act V. 2.
-
- _The Beauties of Shakespear._ By Dr. Wm. Dodd (1729–1777), 1753.
-
-
- LEAR
-
- 258. _Be Kent unmannerly_ and _Prescribe not_, Act I. 1.
-
- 259. _This is the excellent foppery_, Act I. 2.
-
- _the dazzling fence of controversy._ Cf. the ‘dazzling fence’ of
- rhetoric, _Comus_, 790–791.
-
- 260. _beat at the gate, he has made_ and _Let me not stay_, Act I. 4.
-
- _How now, daughter._ _Ibid._ [much o’ the savour].
-
- 263. _O let me not be mad_, Act I. 5.
-
- 264. _Vengeance_ and _Good-morrow to you both_, Act II. 4 [how this
- becomes the house].
-
- 268. _See the little dogs_, Act III. 6.
-
- _Let them anatomise Regan_, Act III. 6.
-
- _Nothing but his unkind daughters_, Act III. 4.
-
- _whether a madman_, Act III. 6.
-
- _Come on, sir_, Act IV. 6.
-
- _full circle home_, Act V. 3.
-
- 269. _Shame, ladies_, Act IV. 3.
-
- _Alack, ’tis he_, Act IV. 4.
-
- _How does my royal lord_, Act IV. 7.
-
- _We are not the first_, Act V. 3.
-
- 270. _And my poor fool_, Act V. 3.
-
- _Vex not his ghost_, Act V. 3 [this tough world].
-
- _Approved of by Dr. Johnson._ See Malone’s _Shakespeare_, vol. X.
- p. 290.
-
- _condemned by Schlegel._ See Schlegel, p. 413.
-
- _The Lear of Shakespear._ See Lamb’s _Miscellaneous Essays_, ed.
- Ainger, 1884, p. 233.
-
- 271. [_For_ that rich sea _read_ that sea.]
-
-
- RICHARD II.
-
- 273. _How long a time_, Act I. 3.
-
- _sighed his English breath_, Act III. 1.
-
- _The language I have learnt_, Act I. 3.
-
- _is hung armour_, Wordsworth’s Sonnet, _It is not to be thought
- of_ (1802).
-
- _keen encounters._ _King Richard III._, Act I. 2.
-
- _If that thy valour_, Act IV. 1 [Till thou the lie-giver and that
- lie do lie].
-
- 275. _This royal throne of kings_, Act II. 1 [fear’d by their breed
- and famous by their birth ... the envious siege].
-
- 276. _Ourself and Bushy_, Act I. 4.
-
- _I thank thee_, Act II. 3.
-
- _O that I were a mockery king_, Act IV. 1.
-
- _it yearned his heart_, Act V. 5.
-
- _My lord, you told me_, Act V. 2 [scowl on gentle Richard].
-
-
- HENRY IV.
-
- 278. _we behold the fulness._ Cf. _Col._ ii. 9.
-
- _lards the lean earth._ _1 King Henry IV._, Act II. 2.
-
- _into thin air._ _The Tempest_, Act IV. 1.
-
- _three fingers_ [omit _deep_], Act IV. 2.
-
- _it snows of meat and drink._ _Canterbury Tales_, Prologue, 345.
-
- _ascends me into the brain_, Part II. Act IV. 3.
-
- _a sun of man_, Part I. Act II. 4.
-
- 279. _open, palpable_, Part I. Act II. 4 [like their father that
- begets them; gross as a mountain, open, palpable].
-
- _By the lord_, Part I. Act I. 2.
-
- 280. _But Hal_, Part I. Act I. 2.
-
- _who grew from four_ [two] _men_, Part I. Act II. 4.
-
- 281. _Harry, I do not only marvel_, Part I. Act II. 4 [purses? a
- question to be asked].
-
- 282. _What is the gross sum_ and _Marry, if thou wert an honest man_,
- Part II. Act II. 1.
-
- 283. _Would I were with him._ _Henry V._, Act II. 3.
-
- _turning his vices_ [diseases], Part II. Act I. 2.
-
- _their legs_, Part II. Act II. 4.
-
- _a man made after supper_ and _Would, cousin Silence_, Part II.
- Act III. 2.
-
- _I did not think Master Silence, in some authority_, and _You
- have here_, Part II. Act V. 3.
-
- 284. _When on the gentle Severn’s sedgy bank_ and _By heaven_ [honour
- from the pale-faced moon], Part I. Act I. 3.
-
- _Had my sweet Harry_, Part II. Act II. 3.
-
-
- HENRY V.
-
- PAGE
-
- 285. _the_ [best] _king of good fellows_, Act V. 2.
-
- _plume up their wills._ _Othello_, Act I. 3.
-
- _the right divine_, Pope’s _Dunciad_, Book IV. 1. 188.
-
- 286. _when France is his_, Act I. 2.
-
- _O for a muse of fire_, Prologue.
-
- 287. _the reformation and which is a wonder_, Act I. 1.
-
- _And God forbid_, Act I. 2.
-
- 288. _the ill neighbourhood_, _For once the eagle England_, and _For
- government_ [the act of order], Act I. 2.
-
- 289. _rich with_ [omit _his_] _praise_, Act I. 2.
-
- _O hard condition_, Act IV. 1.
-
- 290. _The Duke of York_, Act IV. 6.
-
- 291. _some disputations_, Act III. 2.
-
-
- HENRY VI.
-
- 292. _flat and unraised._ _King Henry V._, Act I., Chorus.
-
- _Glory is like a circle_, Part I. Act I. 2.
-
- _yet tell’st thou not_, Part I. Act I. 4.
-
- 293. _Aye, Edward will use women honourably_, Part III. Act III. 2.
-
- _We have already observed._ See note to p. 200 for the source of
- this paragraph.
-
- 294. _The characters and situations._ The material between these words
- and _disappointed ambition_ (p. 297) formed part of an article
- by Hazlitt in _The Examiner_ (see note to p. 200).
-
- _Edward Plantagenet_, Part III. Act II. 2.
-
- _mock not my senseless conjuration._ _Richard II._, Act III. 2
- [foul rebellion’s arms ... lift shrewd steel ... God for his
- Richard].
-
- 295. _But now the blood._ _Richard II._, Act III. 2.
-
- _cheap defence._ Cf. Burke: _Reflections on the Revolution in
- France_, ‘the cheap defence of nations.’
-
- _Awake, thou coward majesty_ [twenty thousand names] and _Where
- is the duke_. _Richard II._, Act III. 2.
-
- 296. _what must the king do now._ _Richard II._, Act III. 3.
-
- _This battle fares_, Part III. Act II. 5.
-
- 297. _had staggered his royal person._ _Richard II._, Act V. 5.
-
-
- RICHARD III.
-
- PAGE
-
- 298. _the character in which Garrick came out._ David Garrick
- (1717–1779) appeared, October 19, 1741, at the theatre in
- Goodman’s Fields.
-
- _the second character in which Mr. Kean appeared._ Edmund Kean
- (1787–1833) appeared at Drury Lane as Shylock, January 26,
- 1814, on February 1st as Shylock, on February 12th as Gloster
- in Richard III. See _Some Account of the English Stage_,
- Genest, vol. viii. pp. 407–408, 1832. See also Hazlitt’s _A
- View of the English Stage_.
-
- _But I was born_, Act I. 3.
-
- 299. _Cooke._ George Frederick Cooke (1756–1811) acted Richard III. at
- Covent Garden on September 20, 1809. See Genest’s _Some Account
- of the English Stage_, viii. p. 178.
-
- 300. _Sir Giles Overreach_, in Massinger’s _A New Way to Pay Old
- Debts_ (1620–33). For Hazlitt’s criticism of Kean’s acting in
- this and the other characters referred to in the same paragraph
- see his _A View of the English Stage_.
-
- _Oroonoko_, or the Royal Slave. A play (1696) by Thomas Southerne
- (1660/1–1746) founded on a novel of Aphra Behn’s (1640–1689).
-
- _Cibber._ See note to p. 157.
-
- 301. _bustle in_, Act I. 1.
-
- _they do me wrong_, Act I. 3 [speak fair].
-
- _I beseech your graces_, Act I. 1.
-
- 302. _Stay, yet look_, Act IV. 1 [rude, ragged nurse].
-
- _Dighton and Forrest_, Act IV. 3.
-
-
- HENRY VIII.
-
- 303. _Nay, forsooth_, Act III. 1.
-
- _Dr. Johnson observes_, Malone’s _Shakespeare_, vol. xix. p. 498.
-
- 304. _Farewell, a long farewell_, Act III. 2.
-
- _him whom of all men_, Act IV. 2.
-
- _while her grace sat down_, Act IV. 1.
-
- 305. _No maid could live near such a man._ Mr. P. A. Daniel suggests
- that by a slip this remark has been said of Shakespeare instead
- of Henry VIII. The emendation would make the paragraph read
- thus: ‘It has been said of him [_i.e._ Henry VIII.]—“No maid
- could live near such a man.” It might with as good reason be
- said of Shakespear—“No king could live near such a man.”’
-
- _the best of kings._ A phrase applied to Ferdinand VII. of Spain
- in official documents. See _The Examiner_, September 25, 1814,
- where the words are ironically italicised.
-
-
- KING JOHN
-
- 306. _denoted a foregone conclusion._ _Othello_, Act III. 3.
-
- _To consider thus._ _Hamlet_, Act V. 1.
-
- 307. _Heat me these irons_, Act IV. 1.
-
- 310. _There is not yet_, Act IV. 3.
-
- _To me_, Act III. 1.
-
- _that love of misery_ and _Oh father Cardinal_, Act III. 4.
-
- 311. _Aliquando._ Ben Jonson’s _Discoveries_, LXIV., _De Shakespeare
- Nostrati_.
-
- _commodity, tickling commodity_, Act II. 1.
-
- 312. _That daughter there_, Act II. 1 [niece to England].
-
- _Therefore to be possessed_, Act IV. 2.
-
-
- TWELFTH NIGHT
-
- 314. _high fantastical_, Act I. 1.
-
- _Wherefore are these things hid_, Act I. 3.
-
- _rouse the night-owl_ and _Dost thou think_, Act II. 3.
-
- _we cannot agree with Dr. Johnson._ See Dr. Johnson’s _Preface_,
- before cited, p. 71.
-
- 315. _What’s her history_, Act II. 4.
-
- _Oh, it came o’er the ear_, Act I., 1 [the sweet sound].
-
- _They give a very echo_, Act II. 4.
-
- _Blame not this haste_, Act IV. 3.
-
- 316. _O fellow, come_, Act II. 4.
-
- _Here comes the little villain_, Act II. 5 [drawn from us with
- cars].
-
-
- THE TWO GENTLEMEN OF VERONA
-
- 318. _It is observable._ The note is by Pope. See Malone’s
- _Shakespeare_, vol. iv. p. 3.
-
- _This whole scene._ Pope’s note is to Act I. 1. See Malone’s
- _Shakespeare_, vol. iv. p. 13.
-
- _Why, how know you_, Act II. 1.
-
- 319. _I do not seek_, Act II. 7.
-
- _The river wanders_ [glideth] _at its_ [his] _own sweet will.
- Sonnet composed upon Westminster Bridge_, September 3, 1802.
-
- _And sweetest Shakespear._ _L’Allegro_, lines 133–134.
-
- [Or sweetest Shakespeare ...
- Warble....]
-
-
- THE MERCHANT OF VENICE
-
- 320. _Mr. Cumberland._ Richard Cumberland (1732–1811), dramatist.
-
- _baited with the rabble’s curse._ _Macbeth_, Act V. 8.
-
- _a man no less sinned against._ Cf. _King Lear_, Act III. 2.
-
- _the lodged hate_, Act IV. 1.
-
- _milk of human kindness._ _Macbeth_, Act I. 5.
-
- _Jewish gaberdine_, Act I. 3.
-
- _lawful_, Act IV. 1.
-
- _on such a day_, Act I. 3.
-
- 321. _I am as like_, Act I. 3.
-
- _To bait fish withal_, Act III. 1.
-
- _What judgment_, Act IV. 1.
-
- 322. _I would not have parted_, Act III. 1.
-
- _civil doctor_ and _On such a night_, Act V. 1.
-
- _conscience and the fiend_, Act II. 2.
-
- _I hold the world_, Act I. 1.
-
- 323. _How sweet the moonlight_, Act V. 1.
-
- _Bassanio and old Shylock_, Act IV. 1.
-
- 324. _’Tis an unweeded garden._ _Hamlet_, Act I. 2 [things rank, and
- gross in nature, possess it merely].
-
-
- THE WINTER’S TALE
-
- 324. _We wonder that Mr. Pope._ See Pope’s _Preface_, Malone’s
- _Shakespeare_, vol. i. p. 15.
-
- _Ha’ not you seen_, Act I. 2.
-
- 325. _Is whispering nothing?_ Act I. 2.
-
- 326. _Thou dearest Perdita_, Act IV. 4.
-
- 329. _Even here undone_, Act IV. 4.
-
-
- ALL’S WELL THAT ENDS WELL
-
- 330. _Oh, were that all_, Act I. 1.
-
- _The soul of this man_, Act II. 5.
-
- _the bringing off of his drum_, Act III. 6 and Act IV. 1.
-
- 331. _Is it possible_, Act IV. 1.
-
- _Yet I am thankful_, Act IV. 3.
-
- _Frederigo Alberigi and his Falcon_, Boccaccio’s _Decameron_, 5th
- day, 9th story.
-
- 332. _the story of Isabella._ _Id._, 4th day, 5th story.
-
- _Tancred and Sigismunda._ _Id._, 4th day, 1st story. See also
- Dryden’s _Sigismonda and Guiscardo_.
-
- _Honoria._ _Id._, 5th day, 8th story. See also Dryden’s _Theodore
- and Honoria_.
-
- _Cimon and Iphigene._ _Id._, 5th day, 1st story. See also
- Dryden’s _Cimon and Iphigenia_.
-
- _Jeronymo._ _Id._, 4th day, 8th story.
-
- _the two holiday lovers._ _Id._, 4th day, 7th story.
-
- _Griselda._ _Id._, 10th day, 10th story.
-
-
- LOVE’S LABOUR’S LOST
-
- 332. _the golden cadences of poesy_, Act IV. 2.
-
- _set a mark of reprobation_, Pope’s note to _The Two Gentlemen of
- Verona_. Malone’s _Shakespeare_, vol. iv. p. 13.
-
- 333. _as too picked_, Act V. 1.
-
- _as light as bird from brake_ [brier]. _A Midsummer Night’s
- Dream_, Act V. 1.
-
- _O! and I forsooth_, Act III. 1 [a humorous sigh ... This
- senior-junior].
-
- 334. _Oft have I heard_, Act V. 2 [your fruitful brain].
-
- _the words of Mercury_, Act V. 2.
-
-
- MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING
-
- 335. _Oh, my lord_, Act I. 1.
-
- _No, Leonato_, Act. IV. 1.
-
- 336. _She dying_, Act IV. 1 [the idea of her life].
-
- _For look where Beatrice_ and _What fire is in mine ears_, Act
- III. 1.
-
- 337. _Monsieur Love_ ... _This can be no trick_, Act II. 3.
-
- _Disdain and scorn_, Act III. 1.
-
-
- AS YOU LIKE IT
-
- 338. _fleet the time_, Act I. 1.
-
- _under the shade_, Act II. 7.
-
- _who have felt_, Cymbeline, Act III. 2.
-
- _They hear the tumult_, Cowper’s _Task_, IV. 99–100, ‘I behold
- the tumult, and am still.’
-
- 339. _And this their life_, Act II. 1.
-
- _suck melancholy_, Act II. 5.
-
- _who morals on the time_, Act II. 7.
-
- _Out of these convertites_, Act V. 4.
-
- _In heedless mazes._ _L’Allegro_, 141–142.
-
- [With wanton heed and giddy cunning,
- The melting voice through mazes running.]
-
- _For ever and a day_, Act IV. 1.
-
- 340. _We still have slept together_, Act I. 3.
-
- _And how like you_, Act III. 2.
-
- 341. _Blow, blow_, Act II. 7.
-
- _an If_, Act V. 4.
-
- _Think not I love him_, Act III. 5.
-
-
- THE TAMING OF THE SHREW
-
- 342. _Think you a little din_, Act I. 2.
-
- _I’ll woo her_, Act II. 1.
-
- 343. _Tut, she’s a lamb_, Act III. 2.
-
- 344. _Good morrow, gentle mistress_, Act IV. 5.
-
- _The mathematics_, Act I. 1.
-
- _The Honey-Moon._ A successful play by John Tobin (1770–1804)
- with a plot similar to that of _The Taming of the Shrew_,
- produced at Drury Lane January 31, 1805.
-
- _Tranio, I saw her coral lips_, Act I. 1.
-
- 345. _I knew a wench_, Act IV. 4.
-
- _Indifferent well_, Act I. 1.
-
- _for a pot_ and _I am Christopher Sly_, Induc. Scene 2.
-
- _The Slies are no rogues_, Induc. Scene 1.
-
-
- MEASURE FOR MEASURE
-
- 345. _The height of moral argument._ ‘The highth of this great
- argument,’ _Paradise Lost_, I. l. 24.
-
- 346. _one that apprehends death_, Act IV. 2.
-
- _He has been drinking_, Act IV. 3.
-
- _wretches_, Schlegel, p. 387.
-
- _as the flesh_, Act II. 1.
-
- _A bawd, sir?_ and _Go to, sir_, Act IV. 2.
-
- 347. _there is some soul of goodness._ _Henry V._, Act IV. 1.
-
- _Let me know the point_, Act III. 1.
-
- 348. _Reason thus with life_, Act III. 1.
-
-
- THE MERRY WIVES OF WINDSOR
-
- PAGE
-
- 349. _commanded to shew the knight._ Cf. Schlegel, p. 427.
-
- 350. _some faint sparks._ _Hamlet_, Act V. 1 [your flashes ... the
- table on a roar].
-
- _to eat._ _2 Henry IV._, Act II. 1.
-
- _to be no more so familiarity._ _2 Henry IV._, Act II. 1.
-
- _an honest_, Act I. 4.
-
- _very good discretions._ Cf. Act I. 1.
-
- _cholers_, Act III. 1.
-
-
- THE COMEDY OF ERRORS
-
- 352. _How long hath this possession_, Act V. 1.
-
- 353. _They brought one Pinch_, Act V. 1.
-
-
- DOUBTFUL PLAYS OF SHAKESPEAR
-
- 353. _All the editors_, Schlegel, p. 442.
-
- _at the blackness_, Schlegel, see above.
-
- 357. _a lasting storm._ _Per._, IV. 1 [whirring me from my friends].
-
-
- POEMS AND SONNETS
-
- 358. _as broad and casing._ _Macbeth_, Act III. 4 [broad and general
- as the casing air].
-
- _cooped._ Cf. _Macbeth_, Act III. 4 [cabined, cribbed, confined].
-
- _glancing from heaven._ _A Midsummer Night’s Dream_, Act V. 1.
-
- 359. _Oh! idle words._ _Lucrece_, ll. 1016–1122 [Out, idle words, be
- you mediators].
-
- _Round hoof’d._ _Venus and Adonis_, ll. 295–300.
-
- _And their heads._ _A Midsummer Night’s Dream_, Act IV. 1.
-
- 360. _Constancy._ _Sonnet_ XXV.
-
- _Love’s Consolation._ _Sonnet_ XXIX.
-
- _Novelty._ _Sonnet_ CII. [stops her pipe].
-
- 361. _Life’s Decay._ _Sonnet_ LXXIII.
-
-
- A LETTER TO WILLIAM GIFFORD, ESQ.
-
-William Gifford (1756–1826), the son of a glazier, after a neglected
-childhood, during which he was at one time apprenticed to a shoemaker,
-entered Exeter College, Oxford, through the kindness of a friend, and
-graduated in 1782. His two satires, _The Baviad_ (1791) and _The Mæviad_
-(1795), were published together in 1797, and his translation of Juvenal,
-upon which he had been working since he left Oxford, in 1802. He became
-editor of _The Anti-Jacobin_ (1797), and was the first editor
-(1809–1824) of _The Quarterly Review_. He published a translation of
-Persius in 1821, and editions of some of the old dramatists: Massinger
-(1805), Ben Jonson (1816), Ford (1827), and Shirley (completed by Dyce,
-1833). In _The Examiner_ for June 14, 1818, appeared a ‘Literary
-Notice,’ entitled ‘The Editor of the Quarterly Review,’ which Hazlitt
-incorporated in the present ‘Letter.’
-
- 366. ‘_False and hollow_,’ _etc._ _Paradise Lost_, II. 112 _et seq._
-
- _Ackerman’s dresses for May._ Rudolf Ackerman’s (1764–1834)
- _Repository of Arts, Literature, Fashions, Manufactures_,
- _etc._, was issued periodically between 1809 and 1828.
-
- _Carlton House._ The residence of the Prince Regent. It was
- pulled down in 1826.
-
- 367. _A Jacobin stationer._ Hazlitt refers to the case of William Paul
- Rogers, a Chelsea stationer, who for taking an active part in a
- petition for reform was deprived of the charge of a letter-box.
- Leigh Hunt referred to the case in _The Examiner_ for February
- 7, 1819 (not February 9, as Hazlitt says), and opened a
- subscription list for Rogers. The two clergymen referred to
- took an active part against Rogers. Wellesley, a brother of the
- Duke of Wellington, was Rector of Chelsea, and Butler had a
- school there.
-
- ‘_The tenth transmitter._’
-
- ‘No tenth transmitter of a foolish face.’
-
- Richard Savage’s _The Bastard_, l. 7.
-
- 368. _Ultra-Crepidarian._ Leigh Hunt published a satire on Gifford
- entitled _Ultra-Crepidarius_ in 1823, but the phrase was
- invented for Gifford, Leigh Hunt says in his preface, ‘by a
- friend of mine ... one of the humblest as well as noblest
- spirits that exist.’ This was perhaps Lamb.
-
- 370. _Your account of the first work._ In _The Quarterly Review_,
- April 1817 (vol. xvii. p. 154).
-
- _Albemarle Street hoax._ John Murray (1778–1843), the founder and
- publisher of _The Quarterly Review_, purchased No. 50 Albemarle
- Street in 1812.
-
- 372. ‘_Secret, sweet and precious._’
-
- ‘The landlady and Tam grew gracious
- Wi’ secret favours, sweet and precious.’
-
- Burns, _Tam o’Shanter_.
-
- 373. ‘_Two or three conclusive digs_,’ _etc._ From a passage in Leigh
- Hunt’s essay ‘On Washerwomen’ referred to by Gifford.
-
- Note. ‘_The milk of human kindness._’ _Macbeth_, Act I. Scene 5.
-
- 374. _Earl Grosvenor._ Gifford was for a time tutor in Lord
- Grosvenor’s family.
-
- ‘_Their gorge did not rise._’ _Hamlet_, Act V. Scene 1.
-
- ‘_You assume a vice_,’ _etc._
-
- ‘Assume a virtue, if you have it not.’
-
- _Hamlet_, Act III. Scene 4.
-
- _In the ‘Examiner.’_ February 25, 1816.
-
- 375. _How little knew’st thou of Calista!_
-
- ‘O, thou hast known but little of Calista!’
-
- Rowe’s _The Fair Penitent_, Act IV. Scene 1.
-
- _Anne Davies._ Gifford bequeathed £3000 to her relatives. In
- addition to the epitaph quoted in the text he wrote an elegy on
- her, beginning, ‘I wish I was where Anna lies,’ which is
- referred to in Hazlitt’s character of Gifford in _The Spirit of
- the Age_.
-
- 376. ‘_Other such dulcet diseases._’ _As You Like It_, Act V. Scene 4.
-
- ‘_Compunctious visitings of Nature_.’ _Macbeth_, Act I. Scene 5.
-
- ‘_You are well tuned now_,’ _etc._ _Othello_, Act II. Scene 1.
-
- ‘_Made of penetrable stuff._’ _Hamlet_, Act III. Scene 4.
-
- ‘_Stuffed with paltry, blurred sheets._’ Burke’s _Reflections on
- the Revolution in France_ (_Select Works_, ed. Payne, ii. 101).
-
- Note 1. ‘_It is easier_,’ _etc._ _St. Matthew_, xix. 24.
-
- 377. _The Admiralty Scribe._ John Wilson Croker (1780–1857), who
- contributed two hundred and sixty articles to _The Quarterly
- Review_, was Secretary to the Admiralty from 1809 to 1830.
-
- _His ‘Feast of the Poets.’_ Published in 1814.
-
- 378. _Thus painters write their names at Co._ From Prior’s
- _Protogenes_ and _Apelles_. Burke quoted the line in his
- _Regicide Peace_ (_Select Works_, ed. Payne, p. 94).
-
- _For this passage_, _etc._ Leigh Hunt and his brother John were
- in prison for two years from February 1813 for a libel on the
- Prince Regent in _The Examiner_ (March 22, 1812). Leigh Hunt
- was sent, not to Newgate, but to the Surrey Gaol in Horsemonger
- Lane, where he wrote _The Descent of Liberty: A Masque_, and
- the greater part of _The Story of Rimini_. Gifford’s review of
- _Rimini_ appeared in _The Quarterly Review_ for Jan. 1816 (vol.
- xiv. p. 473).
-
- 378. _Yet you say somewhere._ In the review of Hazlitt’s _Lectures on
- the English Poets_ (_Quarterly Review_, July 1818, vol. xix. at
- p. 430).
-
- Note. _Mary Robinson_ (1758–1800), known as ‘Perdita,’ from her
- having captivated the Prince of Wales while she was acting in
- that part in 1778. On being deserted by him she devoted herself
- to literature, and became one of the Della Cruscan School
- ridiculed by Gifford. Hazlitt refers to Gifford’s _Baviad_, ll.
- 27–28:—
-
- ‘See Robinson forget her state, and move
- On crutches tow’rds the grave, to “Light o’ Love.”’
-
- _Put on the pannel_, _etc._ ‘If I can help it, he shall not be on
- the inquest of my _quantum meruit_.’ Burke’s _A Letter to a
- Noble Lord_ (_Works_, Bohn, V. 114). Note. _Mr. Sheridan once
- spoke._ See speech of March 7, 1788 (_Parl. Hist._, vol.
- xxvii.).
-
- 379. John Hoppner (1758–1810), the portrait-painter.
-
- Charles Long (1761–1838), paymaster-general, created Baron
- Farnborough in 1826.
-
- 380. ‘_From slashing Bentley_,’ _etc._ Pope, _Prologue to the
- Satires_, l. 164.
-
- 381. ‘_It was Caviare to the multitude._’ ‘’Twas caviare to the
- general.’ _Hamlet_, Act II. Scene 2.
-
- Note. _Hamlet_, Act II. Scene 2.
-
- 382. _An Essay on the Ignorance of the Learned._ Republished in _Table
- Talk_, from _The Scots Magazine_ (New Series), iii. 55.
-
- 384. _Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine._ Founded by William Blackwood
- (1776–1834) in 1817.
-
- _You have tried it twice since._ That is, in his reviews of
- _Characters of Shakespear’s Plays_ (January 1818, vol. xviii.
- p. 458) and of _Lectures on the English Poets_ (July 1818, vol.
- xix. p. 424).
-
- 385. _Be noticed in the Edinburgh Review._ By Jeffrey, July 1817 (vol.
- xxviii. p. 472). ‘_Dedicate its sweet leaves._’
-
- ‘Ere he can spread his sweet leaves to the air,
- Or dedicate his beauty to the sun.’
-
- _Romeo and Juliet_, Act I. Scene 1.
-
- 386. ‘_This is what is looked for_,’ _etc._ _Twelfth Night_, Act III.
- Scene 2.
-
- ‘_They keep you as an ape_,’ _etc._ _Hamlet_, Act IV. Scene 2.
-
- _You ‘have the office,’_ _etc._
-
- ‘——You, mistress,
- That have the office opposite to Saint Peter,
- And keep the gate of hell!’
-
- _Othello_, Act IV. Scene 2.
-
- 386. _You ‘keep a corner,’_ _etc._
-
- ‘Or keep it as a cistern for foul toads
- To knot and gender in.’
-
- _Othello_, Act IV. Scene 2.
-
- ‘_Lay the flattering unction._’
-
- ‘Lay not that flattering unction to your soul.’
-
- _Hamlet_, Act III. Scene 4.
-
- 387. _The authority of Mr. Burke._ Burke refers to Henry VIII. as ‘one
- of the most decided tyrants in the rolls of history,’ and
- speaks of ‘his iniquitous proceedings’ ‘when he resolved to rob
- the abbies.’ _Reflections on the Revolution in France_ (_Select
- Works_, ed. Payne, ii. 136–137). See also a passage in _A
- Letter to a Noble Lord_ (_Works_, Bohn, V. 131 _et seq._).
-
- _With Mr. Coleridge in his late Lectures._ Hazlitt probably
- refers to _The Statesman’s Manual_ (1816). See _Political
- Essays_.
-
- ‘_Truth to be a liar._’ _Hamlet_, Act II. Scene 2.
-
- ‘_Speak out, Grildrig._’ See Swift’s _Gulliver’s Travels_ (Voyage
- to Brobdingnag).
-
- 388. ‘_The insolence of office_,’ _etc._ _Hamlet_, Act III. Scene 1.
-
- _Those ‘who crook,’_ _etc._ _Hamlet_, Act III. Scene 2.
-
- _Spa-fields._ Where the famous meeting of reformers had recently
- (December 2, 1816) been held.
-
- _A seditious Sunday paper._ _The Examiner_ was published on
- Sunday.
-
- _Mr. Coleridge’s ‘Conciones ad Populum.’_ Two anti-Pittite
- addresses published in 1795.
-
- 389. ‘_The pride, pomp_,’ _etc._ _Othello_, Act III. Scene 3.
-
- ‘_One murder makes a villain_,’ _etc._ From Bishop Porteus’s
- prize poem _Death_ (1759).
-
- 390. _The still sad music of humanity._ Wordsworth’s _Lines composed a
- few miles above Tintern Abbey_.
-
- 391. _You have forgotten Mr. Burke_, _etc._ See _Letters on a Regicide
- Peace_ (_Select Works_, ed. Payne, iii. p. 50).
-
- ‘_Go to_,’ _etc._
-
- ‘Go to, Sir; you weigh equally; a feather will turn the scale.’
-
- _Measure for Measure_, Act IV. Scene 2.
-
- ‘The weight of a hair will turn the scales between their avoirdupois.’
-
- _2 Henry IV._, Act III. Scene 4.
-
- ‘_Cinque-spotted_,’ _etc._ _Cymbeline_, Act II. Scene 3.
-
- Note. ‘_Carnage is the daughter of humanity._’ See note to p. 214
- and _Notes and Queries_, 9th series, ii. 309, 398; iii. 37.
-
- 392. _Red-lattice phrases._ Alehouse language. See _Merry Wives of
- Windsor_, Act II. Scene 2.
-
- 393. _Such ‘welcome and unwelcome things.’_ _Macbeth_, Act IV. Scene
- 3.
-
- _The objection to ‘Romeo and Juliet.’_ See _ante_, p. 249.
- Hazlitt refers to the criticism of _Paradise Lost_ in his
- Lecture on Shakspeare and Milton (_Lectures on the English
- Poets_).
-
- Note. Quoted from a review by Jeffrey in _The Edinburgh Review_,
- August 1817 (vol. xxviii. at p. 473).
-
- 394. ‘_One of the most perfect_,’ _etc._ Quoted from Gifford’s review
- of _Characters of Shakespear’s Plays_ (vol. xviii. p. 458).
-
- _Ends of verse_, _etc._
-
- ‘Chear’d up himself with ends of verse,
- And sayings of philosophers.’
-
- _Hudibras_, Part I. Canto iii.
-
- 394. _The geometricians and chemists of France._ Burke’s _A Letter to
- a Noble Lord_ (_Works_, Bohn, V. 142).
-
- ‘_Present to your mind’s eye._’ _Hamlet_, Act I. Scene 2.
-
- ‘_Holds his crown_,’ _etc._ Burke’s _Reflections on the
- Revolution in France_ (_Select Works_, ed. Payne, ii. 17).
-
- 395. _The ingenious parallel_, _etc._ See _ante_, p. 171.
-
- _The article in the last Review._ _Quarterly Review_, July 1818
- (vol. xix, p. 424).
-
- 398. _We must speak by the card_, _etc._ _Hamlet_, Act V. Scene 1.
-
- _A knavish speech_, _etc._ _Hamlet_, Act IV. Scene 2.
-
- _Shakespear says_, _etc._ _Othello_, Act III. Scene 3.
-
- 400. _The authority of Mr. Burke._ Hazlitt quotes inaccurately a
- passage in Burke’s essay ‘On the Sublime and Beautiful,’
- _Works_ (Bohn), i. 81.
-
- _Emelie that fayrer_, _etc._ _Canterbury Tales_ (The Knightes
- Tale, 1035–8).
-
- 401. _The only mistake._ The reference is probably to a passage in the
- first edition, where Hazlitt says, ‘Prior’s serious poetry, as
- his _Alma_, is as heavy, as his familiar style was light and
- agreeable.’ Gifford quotes this passage and adds: ‘Unluckily
- for our critic, Prior’s _Alma_ is in his lightest and most
- familiar style, and is the most highly finished specimen of
- that species of versification which our language possesses.’ In
- the second edition Hazlitt substituted _Solomon_ for _Alma_.
-
- _Mr. Coleridge._ See _Biographia Literaria_, Chap, iii., note at
- the end. Coleridge had already in the first number of the
- Friend referred to this passage, which appeared in a footnote
- by the editor of _The Beauties of the Anti-Jacobin_, and not in
- _The Anti-Jacobin_ itself. See _Athenæum_, May 31, 1900.
-
- _Your predecessor._ Gifford was himself editor of the
- _Anti-Jacobin, or Weekly Examiner_, which appeared from
- November 20, 1797, to July 9, 1798.
-
- 402. ‘_Dying, make a swan-like end._’
-
- ‘Then, if he lose, he makes a swan-like end,
- Fading in music.’
-
- _Merchant of Venice_, Act III. Scene 2.
-
- ‘_Being so majestical_,’ _etc._ _Hamlet_, Act I. Scene 1.
-
- ‘_Love is not love_,’ _etc._ Shakespeare, _Sonnet_ CXVI.
-
- 403. ‘_A writer of third-rate books._’ ‘He is a mere quack, Mr.
- Editor, and a mere bookmaker; one of the sort that lounge in
- third-rate book shops, and write third-rate books.’ From a
- letter in _Blackwood’s Magazine_, August 1818 (vol. iii. p.
- 550).
-
- _An Essay on the Principles of Human Action._ Published in 1805.
-
- 408. _Mirabaud._ D’Holbach’s _Système de la Nature_ is wrongly
- attributed to Jean Baptiste de Mirabaud (1675–1760), the
- translator of Tasso.
-
- 409. ‘_On this bank and shoal of time._’ _Macbeth_, Act I. Scene 7.
-
------
-
-Footnote 87:
-
- _Antony and Cleopatra_, Act IV. Scene 14.
-
-Footnote 88:
-
- For Tramezzani and William Augustus Conway (1789–1828), who were not
- favourites of Hazlitt, see _A View of the English Stage_.
-
-Footnote 89:
-
- _Paradise Lost_, IV. 299.
-
-Footnote 90:
-
- _Don Quixote_, Book III. Chap. xxv.
-
-Footnote 91:
-
- _The Canterbury Tales._ _The Wife of Bath’s Prologue_, ll. 593–599.
-
-Footnote 92:
-
- _Hamlet_, Act II. Scene 2.
-
-Footnote 93:
-
- Cobbett’s _Weekly Political Register_ for November 18, 1815 (vol.
- xxix). Cobbett’s outburst against Milton and Shakespeare is headed ‘On
- the subject of potatoes.’
-
-Footnote 94:
-
- See _ante_, p. 116.
-
-Footnote 95:
-
- _Œuvres_, xxxv. p. 159.
-
-Footnote 96:
-
- Probably the Letter from Paris, dated September 23, 1815, relating to
- the disposal of the works of art acquired by Napoleon.
-
-Footnote 97:
-
- See _ante_, pp. 140–151. The _Catalogue_ appeared in _The Morning
- Chronicle_ during the autumn of 1815 and the spring of 1816, beginning
- on September 22, 1815.
-
-Footnote 98:
-
- The reference seems to be to Samuel Parr (1747–1825) and Charles
- Burney (1757–1817). See Hazlitt’s essay ‘On the Ignorance of the
- Learned’ in _Table Talk_.
-
-Footnote 99:
-
- _2 Henry IV._, Act II. Scene 4.
-
-Footnote 100:
-
- _Midsummer Night’s Dream_, Act I. Scene 2.
-
-Footnote 101:
-
- _Political Register_, July 30, 1802.
-
-Footnote 102:
-
- See _The Faerie Queene_, II. xii. st. 86 and 87.
-
-Footnote 103:
-
- A variation, quoted from Burke (_A Letter to a Noble Lord_), of
- Shakespeare’s well-known lines in _The Tempest_, Act IV. Scene 1.
-
-Footnote 104:
-
- For Burke on Rousseau see especially _A Letter to a Member of the
- National Assembly_ (1791).
-
-Footnote 105:
-
- ‘I give you joy of the report,
- That he’s to have a place at court.’
- ‘Yes, and a place he will grow rich in;
- A turnspit in the royal kitchen.’
-
- Swift, Miscell. Poems, _Upon the Horrid Plot_, etc.
-
- See Burke’s Speech (1780) on Economical Reform.
-
-Footnote 106:
-
- _Reflections on the Revolution in France_ (_Select Works_, ed. Payne,
- ii. 17).
-
-Footnote 107:
-
- See Southey’s _Carmen Triumphale_.
-
-Footnote 108:
-
- See the Notes to Southey’s _Carmen Triumphale_.
-
-Footnote 109:
-
- See _ante_, note to p. 45.
-
-Footnote 110:
-
- _Tristram Shandy_, IX. 26.
-
-Footnote 111:
-
- In the _Life of Napoleon_ Hazlitt refers to this saying, which he
- calls ‘quackery.’
-
-Footnote 112:
-
- ‘Nothing can be conceived more hard than the heart of a thorough-bred
- metaphysician.’ _A Letter to a Noble Lord_ (_Works_, Bohn, V. 141).
-
-Footnote 113:
-
- From the _Essay on Poetry_ of John Sheffield, Duke of Buckingham.
-
-
- Printed by T. and A. CONSTABLE, (late) Printers to Her Majesty at the
- Edinburgh University Press
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES
-
-
- 1. No attempt was made to standardize inconsistencies in spelling such
- as Shakespear, Shakespeare, and Shakspeare.
- 2. Changed “dissoûte” to “dissoute” on p. xxxi.
- 3. Changed “etoit” to “étoit” on p. 90.
- 4. Changed “bonhommie” to “bonhomme” on p. 208.
- 5. Silently corrected typographical errors.
- 6. Retained anachronistic and non-standard spellings as printed.
- 7. Enclosed italics font in _underscores_.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The collected works of William
-Hazlitt, Vol. 1 (of 12), by William Hazlitt
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-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The collected works of William Hazlitt,
-Vol. 1 (of 12), by William Hazlitt
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The collected works of William Hazlitt, Vol. 1 (of 12)
-
-Author: William Hazlitt
-
-Editor: A. R. Waller
- Arnold Glover
-
-Other: W. E. Henley
-
-Release Date: November 11, 2017 [EBook #55932]
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-Language: English
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-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK COLLECTED WORKS--WILLIAM HAZLITT, VOL 1 ***
-
-
-
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-Produced by Richard Tonsing and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
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-
-</pre>
-
-
-<div class='tnotes covernote'>
-
-<p class='c000'><strong>Transcriber's Note:</strong></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='ph1'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c001'>
- <div>THE</div>
- <div>COLLECTED WORKS OF WILLIAM HAZLITT</div>
- <div>IN TWELVE VOLUMES</div>
- <div class='c002'>VOLUME ONE</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c001'>
- <div><em>All rights reserved</em></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_004.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><em>William Hazlitt.</em><br /><br /><em>Aged 13.<br />from a Miniature on Ivory<br />Painted by his Brother.</em></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <h1 class='c003'><span class='xlarge'>THE COLLECTED WORKS OF</span><br /> WILLIAM HAZLITT</h1>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>EDITED BY A. R. WALLER AND ARNOLD GLOVER</span></div>
- <div class='c004'>WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY</div>
- <div><span class='large'>W. E. HENLEY</span></div>
- <div class='c004'>❦</div>
- <div class='c004'>The Round Table</div>
- <div class='c004'>Characters of Shakespear’s Plays</div>
- <div class='c004'>A Letter to William Gifford, Esq.</div>
- <div class='c004'>❦</div>
- <div class='c004'>1902</div>
- <div><span class='large'>LONDON: J. M. DENT &amp; CO.</span></div>
- <div>McCLURE, PHILLIPS &amp; CO.: NEW YORK</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c001'>
- <div>Edinburgh: T. and A. <span class='sc'>Constable</span>, (late) Printers to Her Majesty</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c005'>CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary='CONTENTS'>
- <tr>
- <th class='c006'></th>
- <th class='c007'>PAGE</th>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>INTRODUCTION <span class='fss'>BY</span> WILLIAM ERNEST HENLEY</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_vii'>vii</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>EDITORS’ PREFACE</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_xxvii'>xxvii</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>THE ROUND TABLE</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_xxix'>xxix</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>CHARACTERS OF SHAKESPEAR’S PLAYS,</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_165'>165</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>A LETTER TO WILLIAM GIFFORD, ESQ.,</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_363'>363</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>NOTES</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_415'>415</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_vii'>vii</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>INTRODUCTION</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c009'>Hazlitt’s father, a minister in the Unitarian Church, was the son of
-an Antrim dissenter, who had removed to Tipperary; Hazlitt’s
-mother was the daughter of a Cambridgeshire yeoman; so that there
-is small room for wonder if Hazlitt were all his life distinguished by
-a fine pugnaciousness of mind, a fiery courage, an excellent doggedness
-of temper, and (not to crack the wind of the poor metaphor)
-a brilliancy in the use of his hands unequalled in his time, and since
-his time, by any writing Englishman. Of course, he was very much
-else; or this monument to his genius would scarce be building, this
-draft to his credit would have been drawn for To-Morrow on
-To-Day. But, while he lived, his fighting talent was the sole thing
-in his various and splendid gift that was evident to the powers that
-were; and, inasmuch as he loved nothing so dearly as asserting
-himself to the disadvantage of certain superstitions which the said
-powers esteemed the very stuff of life, they did their utmost to
-dissemble his uncommon merits, and to present him to the world
-at large as a person whose morals were deplorable, whose nose was
-pimpled, whose mind was lewd, whose character would no more
-bear inspection than his English, whose heart and soul and taste were
-irremediable, and who, as he persisted in regarding ‘the Corsican
-fiend’ as a culmination of human genius and character, must for that
-reason especially—(but there were many others)—be execrated as a
-public enemy, and stuck in the pillory whenever, in the black malice
-of his corrupt and poisonous heart, he sought, by feigning an affection
-for Shakespeare, or an interest in metaphysics, to recommend his
-vulgar, mean, pernicious personality to the attention of a loyal,
-God-fearing, church-going, tax-paying, Pope-and-Pretender-hating
-British Public. I cannot say that I regret the very scandalous
-attacks that were made on Hazlitt: since, if they had not been, we
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_viii'>viii</span>should have lacked some admirable pages in the <cite>Political Essays</cite> and
-<cite>The Spirit of the Age</cite>, nor should we now be privileged to rejoice in
-the dignified and splendid savagery of the <em>Letter to William Gifford</em>.
-And, if I do not regret them for myself and the many who think
-with me, still less can I wish them wanting for Hazlitt’s sake; for
-if they had been, who shall say how dull and how profitless, how
-weary and flat and stale, some years of what he described, in his last
-words to his kind, as ‘a happy life’—how mean and beggarly may
-not some days in these years have seemed? But there is, after all,
-a reason for being rather sorry than not that Hazlitt’s polemic was
-so brilliant, his young conviction so unalterably constant, his example so
-detestable as it seemed to the magnificent ruffian in <cite>Blackwood</cite>
-and the infinitely spiteful underling in <cite>The Quarterly</cite>. The British
-Public of those days was a good, hard-hitting, hard-drinking, hard-living
-lot; and, in the matter of letters, there was no guile in it. It
-read its Campbell, its Rogers, its Moore, its Hook and Egan and
-Jon Bee; it accepted its convinced and pedantic sycophant in
-Southey, its gay, light-hearted protestant in Leigh Hunt; it
-nibbled at its Wordsworth, knew not what to make of its Coleridge,
-swallowed its Cobbett (that prince of pugilists) as its morning rasher
-and toast; it made much of Hone, yet was far from contemptuous of
-Westmacott; it laid itself open to its Scott and its Byron, Michael
-and Satan, the Angel of Acceptance and the Angel of Revolt.
-Withal it was essentially a Tory Public: a public long practised in
-fearing God and honouring the King; with half an ear for Major
-Cartwright and his like, and a whole mind for the story of Randal
-and Cribb; honestly and jovially proud of Nelson and ‘The Duke,’
-but neither loving the Emperor nor seeking to understand him.
-Now, to Hazlitt the Revolution was humanity <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">in excelsis</span></i>, while the
-Emperor, being democracy incarnate, and so a complete expression
-of character and human genius, was as his god. Gifford, then, and
-Wilson, had small difficulty in blasting Hazlitt’s fame, and in so far
-ruining Hazlitt’s chance that ’tis but now, after some seventy years,
-that he takes his place in literary history as the hero of a Complete
-Edition. In the meanwhile he has had praise, and praise again.
-But it has come ever from the few, and he has yet to be considered
-of the general as a critic of many elements in human activity, a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_ix'>ix</span>master of his mother-tongue, and one, and that one not the least, in
-an epoch illustrious in the achievement of Keats and Shelley and
-Wordsworth, the inimitable Cobbett, Byron and Sir Walter,
-Coleridge, the Arch-Potency (who, ‘prone on the flood’ of failure,
-ever ‘lies floating many a rood’), and the thrice-beloved Lamb.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>I</h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>The elder Hazlitt was trained in Glasgow. A man of spirit and
-understanding, an active and a vigilant minister, he married Grace
-Loftus, the Wisbech yeoman’s daughter, in 1766; and in 1778 (he
-being much older than she), the last of their children, their son
-William, was born to them at Maidstone. Five years later this son
-accompanied his parents to Philadelphia. There the elder Hazlitt
-preached and lectured for some fifteen months; but in 1786–87,
-having meanwhile established the earliest Unitarian church in America,
-he returned to England, and settled at Wem, in Shropshire, which
-was practically Hazlitt’s first taste of native earth. A precocious
-youngster, well grounded by his father, himself a man of parts and
-reading,<a id='r1' /><a href='#f1' class='c012'><sup>[1]</sup></a> he was responsible as early as 1792 for a <cite>New Theory of
-Criminal and Civil Jurisprudence</cite>, and at fifteen he went to the
-Unitarian College at Hackney, there to study for the ministry. But
-his mind changed. In the meantime he learned something of literature,
-something of metaphysics, something of painting, something (I
-doubt not) of life; the Revolution blazed out, Bonaparte fell falconwise
-upon Austrian Italy, and approved himself the greatest captain
-since Marlborough; there was a strong unrest in time and the destiny
-of man; the ambitions of life were changed, the possibilities and conditions
-of life transformed. The skies thrilled with the dawn of a
-new day, and Hazlitt: already, it is fair to conjecture, at grips with
-that potent and implacable devil of sex which possessed him so
-vigorously for so many years; already, too, the devout and militant
-Radical, the fanatic of Bonaparte, he remained till the end: was no
-longer for the pulpit. And at this moment existence was transfigured
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_x'>x</span>for him also. In the January of 1798, Coleridge, that embodied Inspiration,
-visited the elder Hazlitt at Wem, and preached his last
-(Unitarian) sermon in the chapel there. He was at his best, his
-freshest, his most copious, his most expressive and persuasive; he
-had the poet’s eye, the poet’s mouth, the poet’s voice, impulse,
-authority, style; he had already ‘fed on honey-dew, and drunk the
-milk of Paradise’; and he carried Hazlitt clean off his legs. To
-the sombre, personal, scarce lettered but very thoughtful youth this
-voluble and affecting Apparition was the bearer of a revelation.
-He listened to Coleridge as to a John Baptist. He dared to talk
-metaphysics, and was so far rewarded for his valour as to be encouraged
-to persevere.<a id='r2' /><a href='#f2' class='c012'><sup>[2]</sup></a> What was of vastly greater importance, he
-was asked to Stowey in the spring of the same year: an event from
-which he dated the true beginnings of his intellectual life.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In that centre of enchantment he stayed three weeks. It was a
-Golden Year. Hazlitt was drunk throughout with what I should
-like to call Neophytism. Coleridge was magnificent—elusive,
-archimagian, irresistible; Wordsworth was opinionated but sublime;
-at intervals, as in Sir Richard Burton’s <cite>Thousand Nights and a Night</cite>,
-they ‘repeated the following verses.’ It was a time—O, but it
-was a time! A time of ecstasy: ‘When proud-pied April was in
-all his trim,’ and even ‘heavy Saturn’ must have laughed, if only to
-keep his yoke-fellow, Wordsworth, in company; Wordsworth with
-his thick airs, and his luminous Belt, and his dull but steady-going
-group of Moons! A time of gold, I say; yet had it a most strange
-outcome. In 1798 Coleridge and Wordsworth were Revolutionaries
-in everything: they looked to France for liberty, for change, for a
-shining and enduring example. Hazlitt was with them now and
-here: his also was a revolutionary soul, he also was of a mind with
-Danton, he also looked to France for leading and light, he also held
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xi'>xi</span>the assault delivered upon France for an assault against Freedom.
-But Coleridge and Wordsworth changed their minds, and readjusted
-their points of view; and he did not. They loved not Bonaparte;
-and he did. And the end of it was that, so far as I know, he never
-wrote with so ripe and sensual a gust: not even, to my mind, when
-he was merely annihilating Gifford: as when, long years after Nether-Stowey,
-he broke in upon the strong, solid hold of Wordsworth’s
-egotism, and tore to tatters—tatters which he flung upon the wind—the
-old, greasy prophet’s mantle,<a id='r3' /><a href='#f3' class='c012'><sup>[3]</sup></a> which Coleridge had sported to so
-little purpose for so many years. To Hazlitt, the dissenter born,
-the deeply brooding, the inflexible—to Hazlitt, I say, these Twin-Stars
-of the Romantic Movement were common turn-coats; and he
-dealt with them on occasion as he thought fit. But he never lost
-his interest in them; and when it comes to a comparison between
-Wordsworth, the renegade, and Byron, the leader of storming-parties,
-the captain of forlorn-hopes, then is his idiosyncrasy revealed.
-He hacks and stabs, he jibes and sneers and denies, till there is no
-Byron left, and the sole poet of the century is the ‘gentlemanly
-creature—reads nothing but his own poetry, I believe,’—whose best
-passages, in a moment of supreme geniality, he once likened, not to
-their advantage, to those of ‘the classic Akenside.’</p>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>II</h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>It was from Nether-Stowey that Hazlitt dated his regard for
-poetry. But if literature came late to him, as (his father’s office and
-his own metaphysical inklings aiding) it did, he ever cherished a
-pure and ardent passion for it, once it had come. Yet he was by no
-means widely read, and in his last years seldom finished a new book.
-First and last, indeed, he was a man of few books and fewer authors.
-Shakespeare, Burke, Cervantes, Rabelais, Milton, the <cite>Decameron</cite>, the
-<cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Nouvelle Héloïse</span></cite> and the <cite>Confessions</cite>, Richardson’s epics of the parlour
-and Fielding’s epics of the road—these things and their kind he read
-intensely; and, when it pleased him to speak of them, it was ever in
-the terms of understanding and regard. Yet it was long ere he had
-any thought of writing; and it was necessity alone that made him a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xii'>xii</span>man of letters. In the beginning, the Pulpit proving impossible, he
-turned to painting for a career, and, after certain studies, presumably
-under his elder brother John,<a id='r4' /><a href='#f4' class='c012'><sup>[4]</sup></a> and possibly under Northcote, he
-went to the Paris of the First Consul, and painted there for some
-four months in a Louvre which the thrift of Bonaparte had
-stored with the choicest plunder in Italian Art. I know not whether
-or no he could ever have been a painter. Haydon, who neither
-loved nor understood him, and was, besides, a man who could greatly
-dare and ‘toil terribly’—Haydon says that he was at once too lazy
-and too timid ever to succeed in painting: an art in which, as
-Haydon showed, and as Millet was presently to say, ‘You must flay
-yourself alive, and give your skin.’<a id='r5' /><a href='#f5' class='c012'><sup>[5]</sup></a> I do not think that Hazlitt was
-daunted by what may be called the painfulness of painting; for in
-letters he was soon enough to prove that he had in him to face a
-world in arms, and to tincture his writings, if need were, with the
-best blood of his heart. In any case, after divers essays at copying
-in the Louvre,<a id='r6' /><a href='#f6' class='c012'><sup>[6]</sup></a> and certain attempts at portraiture on his return to
-England,<a id='r7' /><a href='#f7' class='c012'><sup>[7]</sup></a> he found that he could not excel; that, in fact, he was
-neither Titian nor Rembrandt, nor could he even be Sir Joshua. So
-he painted no more, but went on <em>reading</em> certain painters: very much, I
-assume, as he went on taking certain authors; because he loved them
-for themselves, and found emotions—and not only emotions, but
-sensations<a id='r8' /><a href='#f8' class='c012'><sup>[8]</sup></a>—in them.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_xiii'>xiii</span>His ideals are Claude, Rembrandt, Raphael, Poussin, Titian;
-he gives you very gentlemanly and intelligent estimates of Watteau
-and Velasquez; he has an eye—a right one—for Rubens and
-Van Dyck; he exults in Jan Steen, has words of worth for
-Ruysdael and Hobbima, and gives Turner as neat a <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">croc-en-jambe</span></i> as
-you could wish to see. But, despite his training and his gift, he is
-no more in advance of his age than the best of us here and now.
-To him the Carraccis and Salvator are <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">sommités</span></i> of a kind; if, so far
-as I remember, he will have nought to do with Carlo Dolci, he will
-not do without his Guido; I have read no word of his on Lawrence,
-no word of his on Constable, none on Morland; on Hogarth he is
-chiefly literary, on Turner not much more than diabolically ingenious.
-Wisely or not, he took pictures as he took books: they might be
-few, but they must be good; and, not only good but, of (as he
-believed) the best. If they were not, or if they were new, he drew
-them not to his heart, nor adorned the chambers of his mind with
-them. Those chambers were filled with good things long since done.
-To him, then, what were the best things doing? It was his habit
-to take the good thing on; savour its excellences to their last
-sucket; meditate it strictly, jealously, privily, longingly; say, if it
-must be so, a few last words about it—some for the painter, more for
-the man of letters;<a id='r9' /><a href='#f9' class='c012'><sup>[9]</sup></a> and then...? Well, then he accepted the
-situation. I do not know that he cared much for Keats; I do
-know that he found Shelley impossible, that he was never an
-exalted Wordsworthian, and that he hesitated—(ever so little, but he
-hesitated!)—even at Charles Lamb. Politics and all, in truth, he
-was a prophet who adored the past, and had but an infidel eye for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xiv'>xiv</span>the promise of the years. He was interested only in the highest
-achievement; and to be the highest even that must lie behind him.
-Thus, Fielding was good, and Rubens; Sir Joshua was good, and
-so were Richardson and Smollett; so, likewise, Shakespeare was
-good, and Raphael and Titian were good—these with Milton and
-Rembrandt, and Burke and Rousseau and Boccaccio; and it was
-well. Well with them, and well—especially well!—with him: they
-had achieved, and here was he, the perfect lover, to whom their
-achievement was as an enchanted garden, a Prospero’s Island abounding
-in romantic and inspiring chances, unending marvels, miracles of
-vision and solace and pure, perennial delight. And if these, the
-‘Thrones, Dominations, Powers,’ had done their work, and were
-venerable in it, so also in their degrees and sorts had Congreve and
-Watteau, Sir Thomas Browne and Sir Anthony Van Dyck,
-Wycherley and Jordaens; so had even Salvator and John Buncle.
-In dealing with painters, and with purely painters’ pictures, Hazlitt
-generally strikes a right note.<a id='r10' /><a href='#f10' class='c012'><sup>[10]</sup></a> But the man of letters in him is
-inevitably first; and ’tis not insignificant that some of the ‘crack
-passages’ in his writings about pictures are rhapsodies about places—Burleigh
-or Oxford—or pieces of pure literature like that very
-human and ingenious essay ‘On the Pleasures of Painting,’ which
-is one of the best good things in <cite>Table Talk</cite>.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>III</h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>So Hazlitt the painter was gathered to his fathers, and in his stead
-a Hazlitt reigned about whom the world knows little worth the
-telling: a Hazlitt who abridged philosophers, and made grammars,
-and compiled anthologies; a married and domesticated Hazlitt; a
-Hazlitt with a son and heir, and a wife who seems to have cared as
-little for his works and him as, in the long run, he assuredly cared
-for her company and her. The lady’s name was Stoddart; she
-was a brisk, inconsequent, unsexual sort of person—a friend of Mary
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xv'>xv</span>Lamb; and, like the only Mrs. Pecksniff, ‘she had a small
-property.’ It was situate at Winterslow, certain miles from
-Salisbury, and Hazlitt, who loved the neighbourhood, and clung
-to it till the end, has so far illustrated the name that, if there could
-ever be a Hazlitt Cult, the place would instantly become a shrine.
-It was a cottage, within easy walking distance of Wilton and
-Stonehenge; and in 1812 the Hazlitts, who were made one in
-1808, departed it—it and the well-beloved woods of Norman
-Court—for 19 York Street, Westminster.<a id='r11' /><a href='#f11' class='c012'><sup>[11]</sup></a> Hence it was that he
-issued to deliver his first course of lectures;<a id='r12' /><a href='#f12' class='c012'><sup>[12]</sup></a> and here it was that
-he entertained those friends he had, made himself a reputation by
-writing in papers and magazines, drank hard, and cured himself of
-drinking, and long ere the end came found his wife insufferable. In
-the beginning he worked in the Reporters’ Gallery, where he made
-notes (in long hand) for <cite>The Morning Chronicle</cite>, and learned to take
-more liquor than was good for him.<a id='r13' /><a href='#f13' class='c012'><sup>[13]</sup></a> In this same journal he
-printed some of his best political work, and broke ground as a
-critic of acting; and he left it only because he could not help
-quarrelling with its proprietors.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Another stand-by of his was <cite>The Champion</cite>, to his work in which
-he owed a not unprofitable connexion with <cite>The Edinburgh</cite>; yet
-another, <cite>The Examiner</cite>, to which, with much dramatic criticism, he
-contributed, at Leigh Hunt’s suggestion, the set of essays reprinted
-as <cite>The Round Table</cite>, and in which he may therefore be said to have
-discovered his avocation, and given the measure of his best quality.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xvi'>xvi</span>Then, in 1817, he published his <cite>Characters of Shakespeare</cite>, which he
-dedicated to Charles Lamb; in 1818 he reprinted a series of lectures
-(at the Surrey Institute) on the English poets;<a id='r14' /><a href='#f14' class='c012'><sup>[14]</sup></a> in 1819–20 he
-delivered from the same platform two courses more—on the Comic
-Writers and the Age of Elizabeth. He wrote for <cite>The Liberal</cite>, <cite>The
-Yellow Dwarf</cite>, <cite>The London Magazine</cite>—(to which he may very well
-have introduced the unknown Elia)—<cite>Colburn’s New Monthly</cite>; he
-returned to the <cite>Chronicle</cite> in 1824; in 1825 he published <cite>The
-Spirit of the Age</cite>, in 1826 <cite>The Plain Speaker</cite>, the <cite>Boswell Redivivus</cite>
-in 1827; and in this last year he set to work, at Winterslow, on a
-life of Napoleon. That was the beginning of the end. He had no
-turn for history, nor none for research; his methods were personal,
-his results singular and brief; he was as it were an accidental writer,
-whose true material was in himself. His health broke, and worsened;
-his publishers went bankrupt; he lost the best part of the £500
-which he had hoped to earn by his work; and though, consulting
-none but anti-English authorities, he lived to complete a book containing
-much strong thinking and not a few striking passages, it was a
-thing foredoomed to failure: a matter in which the nation, still hating
-its tremendous enemy, and still rejoicing in the man and the battle
-which had brought him to the ground, would not, and could not take
-an interest. Two volumes were published in 1828 (Sir Walter’s
-<cite>Napoleon</cite> appeared in 1827), and two more in 1830; but the work of
-writing them killed the writer.<a id='r15' /><a href='#f15' class='c012'><sup>[15]</sup></a> His digestion, always feeble, was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xvii'>xvii</span>ruined; and in the September of 1830 he died. He was largely, I
-should say, a sacrifice to tea, which he drank, in vast quantities, of
-extraordinary strength. However this be, his ending was (as he’d
-have loved to put it) ‘as a Chrissom child’s.’<a id='r16' /><a href='#f16' class='c012'><sup>[16]</sup></a></p>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>IV</h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>Thus much, thus all-too little, of his course in print. For his
-life, despite his many ‘bursts of confidence,’ the admissions of his
-grandson, and the discoveries of such friends as Patmore, the half
-of it, I think, has to be told to us. This was not his fault, for
-he was in no sense secretive: he would no more lie about himself
-than he would lie about Southey or Gifford. His trick of drinking
-was, while it lasted, public; he proclaimed with all his lungs his
-frank and full approval of the fundamentals of the Revolution and his
-preference of Bonaparte before all the Kings in Europe; he despised
-Shelley the politician, and rejected Shelley the poet, and he cherished
-and made the most he could of his resentment against Coleridge and
-Wordsworth, though his disdain for concealment perilled his friendship
-with Lamb, and well nigh cost him the far more facile regard of
-Leigh Hunt; while, as for Byron, he so bitterly resented the ‘noble
-Lord’s’ pre-eminency that he made no difference, strongly as he
-contemned the Laureate, between the Laureate’s <cite>Vision of Judgment</cite>,
-a piece of English verse immortal by the sheer force of its absurdity,
-and that other <cite>Vision of Judgment</cite>, which is one of the great
-things in English poetry. ’Twas much the same in life. Poor
-Mrs. Hazlitt, though she was well-read, of no account as an housekeeper,
-‘fond of incongruous finery,’ and capable of child-bearing
-withal, was, one may take for granted, not distinguished as a woman.
-Now, her husband, thinker as he approved himself, was very much of
-a male. Who runs may read of his early loves—Miss Railton and
-the rest; ’tis history—at any rate ’tis history according to Wordsworth<a id='r17' /><a href='#f17' class='c012'><sup>[17]</sup></a>—that
-once, in Lakeland, he so dealt with the local beauty
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xviii'>xviii</span>that he came very near to tasting of the local pond; when Patmore
-walked home with him to Westminster, after his first lecture in the
-Surrey Institute, the wayside nymphs flocked to his encounter, and—(so
-Patmore says)—he knew them all;<a id='r18' /><a href='#f18' class='c012'><sup>[18]</sup></a> he has himself recorded the
-confession that in the matter of mob-caps and black stockings and red
-elbows—in fact, on the score of your maid-servant—he could flourish
-a list as long, or thereabouts, as Leporello’s. I know not whether
-he lied or spoke the truth;<a id='r19' /><a href='#f19' class='c012'><sup>[19]</sup></a> but I can scarce believe that he lied. I
-should rather opine that on this point, as on others, Hazlitt, a gross
-and extravagant admirer (be it remembered) of J.-J. Rousseau,
-was, and is, entirely credible. We may take it that his veracity is
-beyond reproach. But ’tis another matter with his taste; and for
-that I can say no more than that I have listened to so many confidences:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>From some we loved, the loveliest and the best</div>
- <div class='line'>That from his Vintage rolling Time has pressed:</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>that I hold it for merely unessential.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But the man who habitually hugs his housemaid is, whether he
-boast of it or not, no more superior to consequences than another:
-especially if he have, as Hazlitt had, an ardent imagination and a
-teeming waste of sentiment. And so Hazlitt found. About 1819
-he ceased from consorting with his wife; and in 1820 he lodged with
-a tailor, one Walker, in Southampton Buildings, Chancery Lane.
-Walker, a most respectable man, had daughters, and one of these, a
-girl well broken-in, it would seem, to the ways of ‘gentlemen’—a
-girl with a dull eye, a ‘sinuous gait,’ and a habit of sitting on the
-knees of ‘gentlemen’; a girl, in fine, who is only to be described by
-an old and sane and homely but unquotable designation—this poor
-half-harlot took on our Don Juan of the area, and brought him to
-utter grief. He looked at passion, as embodied in Sarah Walker,
-until it grew to be the world to him; he went about like a man
-drunken and dazed, telling the story of his slighted love to anybody
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xix'>xix</span>that would listen to it;<a id='r20' /><a href='#f20' class='c012'><sup>[20]</sup></a> now he raved and was rampant, now was
-he soul-stricken and heart-broken; he swore he’d marry Walker
-whether she would or not, and to this end he persuaded his wife to
-follow him to Edinburgh, and there divorce him—<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">pour cause</span></i>, as the
-lady and her legal adviser had every reason to believe;<a id='r21' /><a href='#f21' class='c012'><sup>[21]</sup></a> and having
-achieved a divorce, which was no divorce in law, and been finally
-refused by the young woman in Southampton Buildings, he set to
-work assiduously to coin his madness into drachmas, and wrote, always
-with Jean-Jacques Rousseau in his eye, that <em>Liber Amoris</em> which the
-unknowing reader will find in our Second Volume. It is a book by
-no means bad—if you can at all away with it. Indeed, it is unique in
-English, and the hundred guineas Hazlitt got for it were uncommonly
-well earned. But to away with it at all—that is the difficulty; and,
-as it varies with the temperaments of them that read the book, I shall
-discourse no more of it, but content myself with noting that, in
-writing the <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Liber Amoris</span></i>, Hazlitt wrote off Sarah Walker.<a id='r22' /><a href='#f22' class='c012'><sup>[22]</sup></a> He
-had been in love with a housemaid, but he had been very much more
-in love with his love; and, having wearied all he knew with descriptions
-of his feelings, he wrote those feelings down, cleared his system,
-and became himself again. ’Twas Goethe’s way, I believe—his and
-many another’s; the world will scarce get disaccustomed to it while
-there are women and writing men. What distinguishes Hazlitt
-from a whole wilderness of self-chroniclers is the fulness of his
-revelation. It is extraordinary; but, even so, Rousseau had shown
-him the way. And perhaps the simple truth about the <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Liber</span></i> is that
-it is the best Rousseau—the best and the nearest to the <cite>Confessions</cite>—done
-since Rousseau died.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Sarah Hazlitt married no more; but her husband did. In 1824
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xx'>xx</span>he took to wife a certain Mrs. Bridgewater. She was Scots by birth,
-had lived much abroad, had married and buried a Colonel Bridgewater,
-was of excellent repute, and had about £300 a year; and
-with her new husband and his son by Sarah Stoddart—(who had
-an idea that his mother had been wronged, and seems to have been
-a most uncomfortable travelling companion)—she toured it awhile in
-France and Italy. On the return journey the Hazlitts left her in
-Paris; and when the elder, writing from London, asked her when
-she purposed to come home to him, she replied that she did not
-purpose to come home to him: that, in fact, she had done with
-him, and he would see her no more. So far as I know, he never
-did; so that, as his grandson says, this second marriage was but
-‘an episode.’ Apparently it was the last in his life; for neither
-Mrs. Hazlitt attended him in his mortal illness, nor was there any
-woman at his bed’s head when he passed.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>V</h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>It is told of him that he was dark-eyed and dark-haired, slim in
-figure, rather slovenly in his habit; that he valued himself on his
-effect in evening dress; that his manners were rather ceremonious
-than easy; that he had a wonderfully eloquent face, with a mouth
-as expressive as Kean’s, and a frown like the Giaour’s own<a id='r23' /><a href='#f23' class='c012'><sup>[23]</sup></a>—that
-Giaour whom he did not love. He worshipped women, but was
-awkward and afraid with them; he played a good game of fives, and
-would walk his forty to fifty miles a day; he would lie a-bed till two
-in the afternoon, then rise, dally with his breakfast until eight without
-ever moving from his tea-pot and his chair, and go to a theatre, a
-bite at the Southampton, and talk till two in the morning.<a id='r24' /><a href='#f24' class='c012'><sup>[24]</sup></a> That he
-excelled in talk is beyond all doubt. Witness after witness is here
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xxi'>xxi</span>to his wit, his insight, his grip on essentials, his beautiful trick of
-paradox, his brilliancy in attack, his desperate defence, his varying,
-far-glancing, inextinguishable capacity for expression. And he was
-himself—Hazlitt: a man who borrowed nobody’s methods, set no
-limits to the field of discussion, nor made other men wonder if this
-were no talk but a lecture. He bore no likeness to that ‘great but
-useless genius,’ Coleridge: who, beginning well as few begin, lived
-ever after ‘on the sound of his own voice’; none to Wordsworth,
-whose most inspiring theme was his own poetry; none to Sheridan,
-who ‘never oped his mouth but out there flew’ a jest; none to Lamb,
-who——But no; I cannot imagine Lamb in talk. Hazlitt himself
-has plucked out only a tag or two of Lamb’s mystery; and I own
-that, even in the presence of the notes in which he sets down Lamb
-as Lamb was to his intimates, I am divided in appreciation between
-the pair. Lamb for the unexpected, the incongruous, the profound,
-the jest that bred seriousness, the pun that was that and a light upon
-dark places, a touch of the dread, the all-disclosing Selene, besides;
-Hazlitt for none of these but for himself; and what that was I have
-tried to show. Well; Lamb, Coleridge, Sheridan, Hazlitt, Hunt,
-Wordsworth—all are dead, tall men of their tongues as they were.
-And dead is Burke, and Fox is dead, and Byron, most quizzical of
-lords! And of them all there is nothing left but their published
-work; and of those that have told us most about some of them, ‘in
-their habit as they lived,’ the best and the strictest-seeing, the most
-eloquent and the most persuasive, is assuredly Hazlitt. And, being
-something of an expert in talk,<a id='r25' /><a href='#f25' class='c012'><sup>[25]</sup></a> I think that, if I could break the
-grave and call the great ghosts back to earth for a spell of their
-mortal fury, I would begin and end with Lamb and Hazlitt: Lamb
-as he always was;<a id='r26' /><a href='#f26' class='c012'><sup>[26]</sup></a> Hazlitt in one of his high and mighty moods,
-sweeping life, and letters, and the art of painting, and the nature of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xxii'>xxii</span>man, and the curious case of woman (especially the curious case of
-woman!) into a rapture of give-and-take, a night-long series of
-achievements in consummate speech.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>VI</h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>Many men, as Coleridge, have written well, and yet talked better
-than they wrote. I have named Coleridge, though his talk, prodigious
-as it was, in the long run ended in ‘Om-m-mject’ and
-‘Sum-m-mject,’ and though, some enchanting and undying verses
-apart, his writing, save when it is merely critical, is nowadays of small
-account. But, in truth, I have in my mind, rather, two friends, both
-dead, of whom one, an artist in letters, lived to conquer the English-speaking
-world, while the second, who should, I think, have been the
-greater writer, addicted himself to another art, took to letters late in
-life, and, having the largest and the most liberal utterance I have
-known, was constrained by the very process of composition so to
-produce himself that scarce a touch of his delightful, apprehensive,
-all-expressing spirit appeared upon his page. I take these two cases
-because both are excessive. In the one you had both speech and
-writing; in the other you found a rarer brain, a more fanciful and
-daring humour, a richer gusto, perhaps a wider knowledge, in any
-event a wider charity. And at one point the two met, and that point
-was talk. Therein each was pre-eminent, each irresistible, each a
-master after his kind, each endowed with a full measure of those gifts
-that qualify the talker’s temperament: as voice and eye and laugh,
-look and gesture, humour and fantasy, audacity and agility of mind,
-a lively and most impudent invention, a copious vocabulary, a right
-gift of foolery, a just, inevitable sense of conversational right and
-wrong. Well; one wrote like an angel, the other like poor Poll; and
-both so far excelled in talk that I can take it on me to say that they
-who know them only in print scarce know them at all. ’Twas thus,
-I imagine, with Hazlitt. He wrote the best he could; but I see
-many reasons to believe that he was very much more brilliant and
-convincing at the Southampton than he is in the most convincing and
-the most brilliant of his Essays. He was a full man; he had all the
-talker’s gifts; he exulted in all kinds of oral opportunities; what
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xxiii'>xxiii</span>more is there to say? Sure ’tis the case of all that are born to talk
-as well as write. They live their best in talk, and what they write
-is but a sop for posterity: a last dying speech and confession (as it
-were) to show that not for nothing were they held rare fellows
-in their day.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This is not to say that Hazlitt was not an admirable man of
-letters. His theories were many, for he was a reality among men,
-and so had many interests, and there was none on which he did not
-write forcibly, luminously, arrestingly. He had the true sense of
-his material, and used the English language as a painter his pigments,
-as a musician the varying and abounding tonalities that constitute a
-symphonic scheme. His were a beautiful and choice vocabulary, an
-excellent ear for cadence, a notable gift of expression. In fact, when
-Stevenson was pleased to declare that ‘we are mighty fine fellows,
-but we cannot write like William Hazlitt,’ he said no more than the
-truth. Whether or not we are mighty fine fellows is a Great
-Perhaps; but that none of us, from Stevenson down, can as writers
-come near to Hazlitt—this, to me, is merely indubitable. To note
-that he now and then writes blank verse is to note that he sometimes
-writes impassioned prose;<a id='r27' /><a href='#f27' class='c012'><sup>[27]</sup></a> he misquoted habitually; he was a good
-hater, and could be monstrous unfair; he was given to thinking twice,
-and his second thoughts were not always better than his first; he
-repeated himself as seemed good to him. But in the criticism of
-politics, the criticism of letters, the criticism of acting, the criticism
-and expression of life,<a id='r28' /><a href='#f28' class='c012'><sup>[28]</sup></a> there is none like him. His politics are not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xxiv'>xxiv</span>mine; I think he is ridiculously mistaken when he contrasts the
-Wordsworth of the best things in <cite>The Excursion</cite> with the ‘classic
-Akenside’; his <cite>Byron</cite> is the merest petulance; his <cite>Burke</cite> (when he
-is in a bad temper with Burke), his <cite>Fox</cite>, his <cite>Pitt</cite>, his <cite>Bonaparte</cite>—these
-are impossible. Also, I never talk art or life with him but
-I disagree. But I go on reading him, all the same; and I find
-that technically and spiritually I am always the better for the bout.
-Where outside Boswell is there better talk than in Hazlitt’s <cite>Boswell
-Redivivus</cite>—his so-called <cite>Conversations with Northcote</cite>? And his
-<cite>Age of Elizabeth</cite>, and his <cite>Comic Writers</cite>, and his <cite>Spirit of the Age</cite>—where
-else to look for such a feeling for differences, such a sense of
-literature, such an instant, such a masterful, whole-hearted interest in
-the marking and distinguishing qualities of writers? And <cite>The Plain
-Speaker</cite>—is it not at least as good reading as (say) <cite>Virginibus Puerisque</cite>
-and the discoursings of the late imperishable Mr. Pater! His
-<cite>Political Essays</cite> is readable after—how many years? His notes on
-Kean and the Siddons are as novel and convincing as when they
-were penned. In truth, he is ever a solace and a refreshment. As
-a critic of letters he lacks the intense, immortalising vision,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xxv'>xxv</span>even as he lacks, in places, the illuminating and inevitable style of
-Lamb. But if he be less savoury, he is also more solid, and he
-gives you phrases, conclusions, splendours of insight and expression,
-high-piled and golden essays in appreciation: as the <em>Wordsworth</em> and
-the <em>Coleridge</em> of the <cite>Political Essays</cite>, the character of Hamlet, the
-note on Shakespeare’s style, the <em>Horne Tooke</em>, the <em>Cervantes</em>, the
-<em>Rousseau</em>, the <em>Sir Thomas Browne</em>, the <em>Cobbet</em>: that must ever be
-rated high among the possessions of the English mind.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As a writer, therefore, it is with Lamb that I would bracket him:
-they are dissimilars, but they go gallantly and naturally together—<i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">par
-nobile fratrum</span></i>.<a id='r29' /><a href='#f29' class='c012'><sup>[29]</sup></a> Give us these two, with some ripe Cobbett, a
-volume of Southey, some Wordsworth, certain pages of Shelley, a
-great deal of the Byron who wrote letters, and we get the right prose
-of the time. The best of it all, perhaps, is the best of Lamb.
-But Hazlitt’s, for different qualities, is so imminent and shining a
-second that I hesitate as to the pre-eminency. Probably the race is
-Lamb’s. But Hazlitt is ever Hazlitt; and at his highest moments
-Hazlitt is hard to beat, and has not these many years been beaten.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>W. E. H.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_xxvii'>xxvii</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>EDITORS’ PREFACE</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c009'>Two previous editions of Hazlitt’s works have been published: the
-Templeman edition, edited by the author’s son, and the seven volume
-edition in Bohn’s Library, edited by the author’s grandson, Mr. W.
-Carew Hazlitt. Valuable as these editions are from the exceptional
-advantages enjoyed by the respective editors, neither of them professes
-to be, or is, complete, and the aim of the present edition is to give for
-the first time an accurate text of the complete collected writings of
-Hazlitt with the exception of his <cite>Life of Napoleon</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the case of works published in book form by Hazlitt himself
-the latest edition published in his lifetime is here reprinted. Some
-obvious errors of the press have been corrected, but no attempt has
-been made to modernise or improve Hazlitt’s orthography or
-punctuation. He himself expressed contempt for ‘the collating of
-points and commas,’ and was probably a careless proof reader. He
-did not plume himself, as Boswell did, upon a deliberately adopted
-orthography, and his punctuation and use of italics were perhaps
-rather his printers’ fancy than his own. However that may be,
-the Editors feel that there is no justification for any tampering with
-his text. Essays not republished by Hazlitt himself are printed
-from the periodical or other publication in which they first appeared.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It has been found impossible to avoid a good deal of repetition.
-All readers of Hazlitt know that he repeated not only phrases and
-sentences, but paragraphs and pages, as, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">e.g.</span></i>, in the case of the essay
-on ‘The Character of Pitt’ (see note to p. 125). A few of
-such cases might have been dealt with by means of cross references,
-but they are so numerous that the cross references would have become
-tiresome if only one of the identical or nearly identical passages had
-been printed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The notes chiefly contain bibliographical matter, concise biographical
-details of some of the persons mentioned by Hazlitt, and references
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xxviii'>xxviii</span>to quotations. They also include several passages which Hazlitt
-omitted from his essays when he came to republish them in book
-form. Some of these are in themselves worthy of preservation;
-some help to explain the ferocity of certain contemporary allusions;
-and it is at any rate interesting to compare what he rejected with
-what he retained in moments of reflection.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>One word is necessary here as to the course which has been
-adopted with Hazlitt’s very numerous and very inaccurate quotations.
-In many cases his quotations are simply and unintentionally inaccurate,
-but very often he misquotes (if so it can be called) on purpose.
-That is to say, in his masterful way he presses quotations into his
-service, and if they are not exactly serviceable as they stand, he
-makes them so by changing a word here and there, or by blending
-two or more quotations together. He sometimes quotes (or misquotes)
-without using quotation marks, and the Editors would fain
-believe that he sometimes uses quotation marks to round off some
-unusually happy phrase of his own. The variations between Hazlitt
-and his original are given in the notes where it seemed desirable that
-they should be given, but in no case have his quotations been
-corrected or altered in the <em>text</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It has been a pleasure to the Editors to have the sympathy and
-co-operation of Mr. W. Carew Hazlitt, and they desire to thank him
-for his valuable assistance. At the same time they accept entire
-responsibility for the errors and failings which may be found in their
-work.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>A. R. W.</div>
- <div class='line'>A. G.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_xxix'>xxix</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>THE ROUND TABLE</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_xxx'>xxx</span>
- <h3 class='c010'>BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'><cite>The Round Table</cite> was published in two 12mo volumes in 1817. The title-page
-runs as follows: ‘The Round Table: A Collection of Essays on Literature,
-Men, and Manners, By William Hazlitt. Edinburgh: Printed for Archibald
-Constable and Co. And Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, London, 1817.’
-Twelve of the fifty-two numbers were by Leigh Hunt, as the Advertisement
-explains. The essays consisted for the most part, but not entirely, of papers
-contributed to <cite>The Examiner</cite> under the title of ‘The Round Table’ between
-January 1, 1815, and January 5, 1817. Hazlitt, however, included several essays
-taken from other columns of <cite>The Examiner</cite> and from <cite>The Morning Chronicle</cite> and
-other sources, and did not include the whole of his contributions to the Round
-Table series. A ‘third’ edition, edited by the author’s son, was published in one
-12mo volume in 1841. In this edition many essays were omitted which had
-appeared, or were intended to appear, in the series of Hazlitt’s works then being
-published by Templeman; three essays contributed by Hazlitt to <cite>The Liberal</cite> in
-1822 were added; and Leigh Hunt’s essays were retained. Hazlitt’s essays as
-published in the two volumes of 1817 were restored, and Leigh Hunt’s essays were
-for the first time omitted in a later edition (8vo, 1871) edited by the author’s
-grandson, Mr. W. C. Hazlitt. The present edition is an exact reproduction of
-Hazlitt’s essays from the edition of 1817, except that a few obvious printer’s errors
-have been corrected. Of the contributions made by Hazlitt to the Round Table
-series in <cite>The Examiner</cite> and not included in the two volumes of 1817 some were
-used by him in other publications, <cite>Characters of Shakespear’s Plays</cite> (1817) and <cite>Political
-Essays</cite> (1819), some were published in the posthumous <cite>Winterslow</cite> (1850), and
-some have not been hitherto republished. The source of each of the following
-essays is indicated in the Notes. Gifford’s review of <cite>The Round Table</cite> in <cite>The
-Quarterly Review</cite> for April 1817 is dealt with by the author in <cite>A Letter to William
-Gifford, Esq.</cite>, which is included in this volume.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_xxxi'>xxxi</span>
- <h3 class='c010'>ADVERTISEMENT TO THE EDITION OF 1817</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>The following work falls somewhat short of its title and original
-intention. It was proposed by my friend, Mr. Hunt, to publish a
-series of papers in the Examiner, in the manner of the early periodical
-Essayists, the Spectator and Tatler. These papers were to be contributed
-by various persons on a variety of subjects; and Mr. Hunt,
-as the Editor, was to take the characteristic or dramatic part of
-the work upon himself. I undertook to furnish occasional Essays
-and Criticisms; one or two other friends promised their assistance;
-but the essence of the work was to be miscellaneous. The next
-thing was to fix upon a title for it. After much doubtful consultation,
-that of <span class='sc'>The Round Table</span> was agreed upon as most
-descriptive of its nature and design. But our plan had been no
-sooner arranged and entered upon, than Buonaparte landed at Frejus,
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">et voila la Table Ronde dissoute<a id='txxxi'></a></span></i>. Our little congress was broken up as
-well as the great one; Politics called off the attention of the Editor
-from the <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Belles Lettres</span></cite>; and the task of continuing the work fell
-chiefly upon the person who was least able to give life and spirit to
-the original design. A want of variety in the subjects and mode of
-treating them, is, perhaps, the least disadvantage resulting from this
-circumstance. All the papers, in the two volumes here offered to
-the public, were written by myself and Mr. Hunt, except a letter
-communicated by a friend in the seventeenth number. Out of the
-fifty-two numbers, twelve are Mr. Hunt’s, with the signatures L. H.
-or H. T. For all the rest I am answerable.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>W. Hazlitt.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'><em>January 5, 1817.</em></span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_xxxiii'>xxxiii</span>
- <h3 class='c010'>CONTENTS</h3>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table1' summary='CONTENTS'>
- <tr>
- <th class='c006'></th>
- <th class='c007'>PAGE</th>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>On the Love of Life</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_1'>1</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>On Classical Education</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_4'>4</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>On the Tatler</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_7'>7</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>On Modern Comedy</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_10'>10</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>On Mr. Kean’s Iago</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_14'>14</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>On the Love of the Country</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_17'>17</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>On Posthumous Fame.—Whether Shakspeare was influenced by a Love of it?</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_21'>21</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>On Hogarth’s Marriage a-la-mode</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_25'>25</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>The Subject continued</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_28'>28</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>On Milton’s Lycidas</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_31'>31</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>On Milton’s Versification</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_36'>36</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>On Manner</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_41'>41</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>On the Tendency of Sects</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_47'>47</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>On John Buncle</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_51'>51</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>On the Causes of Methodism</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_57'>57</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>On the Midsummer Night’s Dream</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_61'>61</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>On the Beggar’s Opera</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_65'>65</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>On Patriotism—A Fragment</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_67'>67</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>On Beauty</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_68'>68</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>On Imitation</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_72'>72</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>On <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Gusto</span></i></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_77'>77</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>On Pedantry</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_80'>80</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>The same Subject continued</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_84'>84</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>On the Character of Rousseau</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_88'>88</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>On Different Sorts of Fame</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_93'>93</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Character of John Bull</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_97'>97</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>On Good-Nature</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_100'>100</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_xxxiv'>xxxiv</span>On the Character of Milton’s Eve</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_105'>105</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Observations on Mr. Wordsworth’s Poem The Excursion</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_111'>111</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>The same Subject continued</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_120'>120</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Character of the late Mr. Pitt</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_125'>125</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>On Religious Hypocrisy</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_128'>128</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>On the Literary Character</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_131'>131</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>On Common-place Critics</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_136'>136</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>On the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Catalogue Raisonné</span> of the British Institution</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_140'>140</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>The same Subject continued</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_146'>146</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>On Poetical Versatility</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_151'>151</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>On Actors and Acting</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_153'>153</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>On the Same</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_156'>156</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Why the Arts are not Progressive: A Fragment</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_160'>160</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_1'>1</span></div>
-<div class='ph2'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c001'>
- <div>THE ROUND TABLE</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>No. 1.</span>]&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; ON THE LOVE OF LIFE&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; [<span class='sc'>Jan. 15, 1815.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>It is our intention, in the course of these papers, occasionally to
-expose certain vulgar errors, which have crept into our reasonings on
-men and manners. Perhaps one of the most interesting of these, is
-that which relates to the source of our general attachment to life.
-We are not going to enter into the question, whether life is, on the
-whole, to be regarded as a blessing, though we are by no means
-inclined to adopt the opinion of that sage, who thought ‘that the best
-thing that could have happened to a man was never to have been born,
-and the next best to have died the moment after he came into existence.’
-The common argument, however, which is made use of to
-prove the value of life, from the strong desire which almost every one
-feels for its continuance, appears to be altogether inconclusive. The
-wise and the foolish, the weak and the strong, the lame and the
-blind, the prisoner and the free, the prosperous and the wretched, the
-beggar and the king, the rich and the poor, the young and the old,
-from the little child who tries to leap over his own shadow, to the old
-man who stumbles blindfold on his grave, all feel this desire in
-common. Our notions with respect to the importance of life, and
-our attachment to it, depend on a principle, which has very little to
-do with its happiness or its misery.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The love of life is, in general, the effect not of our enjoyments,
-but of our passions. We are not attached to it so much for its own
-sake, or as it is connected with happiness, as because it is necessary
-to action. Without life there can be no action—no objects of pursuit—no
-restless desires—no tormenting passions. Hence it is that we
-fondly cling to it—that we dread its termination as the close, not of
-enjoyment, but of hope. The proof that our attachment to life is not
-absolutely owing to the immediate satisfaction we find in it, is, that
-those persons are commonly found most loth to part with it who have
-the least enjoyment of it, and who have the greatest difficulties to
-struggle with, as losing gamesters are the most desperate. And
-farther, there are not many persons who, with all their pretended love
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_2'>2</span>of life, would not, if it had been in their power, have melted down
-the longest life to a few hours. ‘The school-boy,’ says Addison,
-‘counts the time till the return of the holidays; the minor longs to be
-of age; the lover is impatient till he is married.’—‘Hope and
-fantastic expectations spend much of our lives; and while with
-passion we look for a coronation, or the death of an enemy, or a day
-of joy, passing from fancy to possession without any intermediate
-notices, we throw away a precious year’ (Jeremy Taylor). We
-would willingly, and without remorse, sacrifice not only the present
-moment, but all the interval (no matter how long) that separates us
-from any favourite object. We chiefly look upon life, then, as the
-means to an end. Its common enjoyments and its daily evils are
-alike disregarded for any idle purpose we have in view. It should
-seem as if there were a few green sunny spots in the desert of life,
-to which we are always hastening forward: we eye them wistfully in
-the distance, and care not what perils or suffering we endure, so that
-we arrive at them at last. However weary we may be of the same
-stale round—however sick of the past—however hopeless of the
-future—the mind still revolts at the thought of death, because the
-fancied possibility of good, which always remains with life, gathers
-strength as it is about to be torn from us for ever, and the dullest
-scene looks bright compared with the darkness of the grave. Our
-reluctance to part with existence evidently does not depend on the
-calm and even current of our lives, but on the force and impulse of
-the passions. Hence that indifference to death which has been sometimes
-remarked in people who lead a solitary and peaceful life in
-remote and barren districts. The pulse of life in them does not beat
-strong enough to occasion any violent revulsion of the frame when it
-ceases. He who treads the green mountain turf, or he who sleeps
-beneath it, enjoys an almost equal quiet. The death of those persons
-has always been accounted happy, who had attained their utmost
-wishes, who had nothing left to regret or to desire. Our repugnance
-to death increases in proportion to our consciousness of having lived
-in vain—to the violence of our efforts, and the keenness of our
-disappointments—and to our earnest desire to find in the future, if
-possible, a rich amends for the past. We may be said to nurse our
-existence with the greatest tenderness, according to the pain it has
-cost us; and feel at every step of our varying progress the truth of
-that line of the poet—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘An ounce of sweet is worth a pound of sour.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The love of life is in fact the sum of all our passions and of all our
-enjoyments; but these are by no means the same thing, for the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_3'>3</span>vehemence of our passions is irritated, not less by disappointment than
-by the prospect of success. Nothing seems to be a match for this
-general tenaciousness of existence, but such an extremity either of
-bodily or mental suffering as destroys at once the power both of habit
-and imagination. In short, the question, whether life is accompanied
-with a greater quantity of pleasure or pain, may be fairly set aside
-as frivolous, and of no practical utility; for our attachment to life
-depends on our interest in it; and it cannot be denied that we have
-more interest in this moving, busy scene, agitated with a thousand
-hopes and fears, and checkered with every diversity of joy and
-sorrow, than in a dreary blank. To be something is better than to
-be nothing, because we can feel no interest in <em>nothing</em>. Passion,
-imagination, self-will, the sense of power, the very consciousness of
-our existence, bind us to life, and hold us fast in its chains, as by
-a magic spell, in spite of every other consideration. Nothing can
-be more philosophical than the reasoning which Milton puts into the
-mouth of the fallen angel:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘And that must end us, that must be our cure,</div>
- <div class='line'>To be no more; Sad cure: For who would lose,</div>
- <div class='line'>Though full of pain, this intellectual being,</div>
- <div class='line'>Those thoughts that wander through eternity,</div>
- <div class='line'>To perish rather, swallow’d up and lost</div>
- <div class='line'>In the wide womb of uncreated night,</div>
- <div class='line'>Devoid of sense and motion?’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Nearly the same account may be given in answer to the question
-which has been asked, <em>Why so few tyrants kill themselves?</em> In the
-first place, they are never satisfied with the mischief they have done,
-and cannot quit their hold of power, after all sense of pleasure is fled.
-Besides, they absurdly argue from the means of happiness placed
-within their reach to the end itself; and, dazzled by the pomp and
-pageantry of a throne, cannot relinquish the persuasion that they <em>ought</em>
-to be happier than other men. The prejudice of opinion, which
-attaches us to life, is in them stronger than in others, and incorrigible
-to experience. The Great are life’s fools—dupes of the splendid
-shadows that surround them, and wedded to the very mockeries of
-opinion.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Whatever is our situation or pursuit in life, the result will be much
-the same. The strength of the passion seldom corresponds to the
-pleasure we find in its indulgence. The miser ‘robs himself to increase
-his store’; the ambitious man toils up a slippery precipice only
-to be tumbled headlong from its height: the lover is infatuated with
-the charms of his mistress, exactly in proportion to the mortifications
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_4'>4</span>he has received from her. Even those who succeed in nothing, who,
-as it has been emphatically expressed—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Are made desperate by too quick a sense</div>
- <div class='line'>Of constant infelicity; cut off</div>
- <div class='line'>From peace like exiles, on some barren rock,</div>
- <div class='line'>Their life’s sad prison, with no more of ease,</div>
- <div class='line'>Than sentinels between two armies set’;</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>are yet as unwilling as others to give over the unprofitable strife:
-their harassed feverish existence refuses rest, and frets the languor of
-exhausted hope into the torture of unavailing regret. The exile, who
-has been unexpectedly restored to his country and to liberty, often
-finds his courage fail with the accomplishment of all his wishes, and
-the struggle of life and hope ceases at the same instant.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>We once more repeat, that we do not, in the foregoing remarks,
-mean to enter into a comparative estimate of the value of human life,
-but merely to shew that the strength of our attachment to it is a very
-fallacious test of its happiness.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>W. H.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>No. 2.</span>]&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; ON CLASSICAL EDUCATION&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; [<span class='sc'>Feb. 12, 1815.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>The study of the Classics is less to be regarded as an exercise of the
-intellect, than as ‘a discipline of humanity.’ The peculiar advantage
-of this mode of education consists not so much in strengthening the
-understanding, as in softening and refining the taste. It gives men
-liberal views; it accustoms the mind to take an interest in things
-foreign to itself; to love virtue for its own sake; to prefer fame to
-life, and glory to riches; and to fix our thoughts on the remote and
-permanent, instead of narrow and fleeting objects. It teaches us to
-believe that there is something really great and excellent in the world,
-surviving all the shocks of accident and fluctuations of opinion, and
-raises us above that low and servile fear, which bows only to present
-power and upstart authority. Rome and Athens filled a place in the
-history of mankind, which can never be occupied again. They were
-two cities set on a hill, which could not be hid; all eyes have seen
-them, and their light shines like a mighty sea-mark into the abyss
-of time.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Still green with bays each ancient altar stands,</div>
- <div class='line'>Above the reach of sacrilegious hands;</div>
- <div class='line'>Secure from flames, from envy’s fiercer rage,</div>
- <div class='line'>Destructive war, and all-involving age.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>Hail, bards triumphant, born in happier days,</div>
- <div class='line'>Immortal heirs of universal praise!</div>
- <div class='line'>Whose honours with increase of ages grow,</div>
- <div class='line'>As streams roll down, enlarging as they flow!’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is this feeling, more than anything else, which produces a
-marked difference between the study of the ancient and modern
-languages, and which, from the weight and importance of the consequences
-attached to the former, stamps every word with a monumental
-firmness. By conversing with the <em>mighty dead</em>, we imbibe
-sentiment with knowledge; we become strongly attached to those
-who can no longer either hurt or serve us, except through the influence
-which they exert over the mind. We feel the presence of that power
-which gives immortality to human thoughts and actions, and catch
-the flame of enthusiasm from all nations and ages.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is hard to find in minds otherwise formed, either a real love of
-excellence, or a belief that any excellence exists superior to their own.
-Everything is brought down to the vulgar level of their own ideas
-and pursuits. Persons without education certainly do not want either
-acuteness or strength of mind in what concerns themselves, or in
-things immediately within their observation; but they have no power
-of abstraction, no general standard of taste, or scale of opinion. They
-see their objects always near, and never in the horizon. Hence arises
-that egotism which has been remarked as the characteristic of self-taught
-men, and which degenerates into obstinate prejudice or petulant
-fickleness of opinion, according to the natural sluggishness or activity
-of their minds. For they either become blindly bigoted to the first
-opinions they have struck out for themselves, and inaccessible to conviction;
-or else (the dupes of their own vanity and shrewdness) are
-everlasting converts to every crude suggestion that presents itself, and
-the last opinion is always the true one. Each successive discovery
-flashes upon them with equal light and evidence, and every new fact
-overturns their whole system. It is among this class of persons,
-whose ideas never extend beyond the feeling of the moment, that we
-find partizans, who are very honest men, with a total want of principle,
-and who unite the most hardened effrontery, and intolerance of opinion,
-to endless inconsistency and self-contradiction.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A celebrated political writer of the present day, who is a great
-enemy to classical education, is a remarkable instance both of what
-can and what cannot be done without it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It has been attempted of late to set up a distinction between the
-education <em>of words</em>, and the education <em>of things</em>, and to give the
-preference in all cases to the latter. But, in the first place, the knowledge
-of things, or of the realities of life, is not easily to be taught
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>except by things themselves, and, even if it were, is not so absolutely
-indispensable as it has been supposed. ‘The world is too much with
-us, early and late’; and the fine dream of our youth is best prolonged
-among the visionary objects of antiquity. We owe many of our most
-amiable delusions, and some of our superiority, to the grossness of
-mere physical existence, to the strength of our associations with
-words. Language, if it throws a veil over our ideas, adds a softness
-and refinement to them, like that which the atmosphere gives to
-naked objects. There can be no true elegance without taste in style.
-In the next place, we mean absolutely to deny the application of the
-principle of utility to the present question. By an obvious transposition
-of ideas, some persons have confounded a knowledge of useful
-things with useful knowledge. Knowledge is only useful in itself,
-as it exercises or gives pleasure to the mind: the only knowledge that
-is of use in a practical sense, is professional knowledge. But knowledge,
-considered as a branch of general education, can be of use only
-to the mind of the person acquiring it. If the knowledge of language
-produces pedants, the other kind of knowledge (which is proposed
-to be substituted for it) can only produce quacks. There is no
-question, but that the knowledge of astronomy, of chemistry, and of
-agriculture, is highly useful to the world, and absolutely necessary to
-be acquired by persons carrying on certain professions: but the
-practical utility of a knowledge of these subjects ends there. For
-example, it is of the utmost importance to the navigator to know
-exactly in what degree of longitude and latitude such a rock lies:
-but to us, sitting here about our Round Table, it is not of the smallest
-consequence whatever, whether the map-maker has placed it an inch
-to the right or to the left; we are in no danger of running against it.
-So the art of making shoes is a highly useful art, and very proper to
-be known and practised by some body: that is, by the shoemaker.
-But to pretend that every one else should be thoroughly acquainted
-with the whole process of this ingenious handicraft, as one branch of
-useful knowledge, would be preposterous. It is sometimes asked,
-What is the use of poetry? and we have heard the argument carried
-on almost like a parody on <em>Falstaff’s</em> reasoning about Honour. ‘Can
-it set a leg? No. Or an arm? No. Or take away the grief of a
-wound? No. Poetry hath no skill in surgery then? No.’ It is
-likely that the most enthusiastic lover of poetry would so far agree to
-the truth of this statement, that if he had just broken a leg, he would
-send for a surgeon, instead of a volume of poems from a library. But,
-‘they that are whole need not a physician.’ The reasoning would
-be well founded, if we lived in an hospital, and not in the world.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>W. H.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>
- <h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>No. 3.</span>]&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; ON THE TATLER&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; [<span class='sc'>March 5, 1815.</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>Of all the periodical Essayists, (our ingenious predecessors), the
-<cite>Tatler</cite> has always appeared to us the most accomplished and agreeable.
-Montaigne, who was the father of this kind of personal
-authorship among the moderns, in which the reader is admitted
-behind the curtain, and sits down with the writer in his gown and
-slippers, was a most magnanimous and undisguised egotist; but
-Isaac Bickerstaff, Esq. was the more disinterested gossip of the two.
-The French author is contented to describe the peculiarities of his
-own mind and person, which he does with a most copious and
-unsparing hand. The English journalist, good-naturedly, lets you
-into the secret both of his own affairs and those of his neighbours.
-A young lady, on the other side of Temple Bar, cannot be seen at
-her glass for half a day together, but Mr. Bickerstaff takes due
-notice of it; and he has the first intelligence of the symptoms of the
-<em>belle</em> passion appearing in any young gentleman at the west end of the
-town. The departures and arrivals of widows with handsome jointures,
-either to bury their grief in the country, or to procure a second
-husband in town, are regularly recorded in his pages. He is well
-acquainted with the celebrated beauties of the last age at the Court
-of Charles <span class='fss'>II.</span> and the old gentleman often grows romantic in
-recounting the disastrous strokes which his youth suffered from the
-glances of their bright eyes and their unaccountable caprices. In
-particular, he dwells with a secret satisfaction on one of his mistresses
-who left him for a rival, and whose constant reproach to her husband,
-on occasion of any quarrel between them, was,—‘I, that might have
-married the famous Mr. Bickerstaff, to be treated in this manner!’
-The club at the <em>Trumpet</em> consists of a set of persons as entertaining as
-himself. The cavalcade of the justice of the peace, the knight of the
-shire, the country squire, and the young gentleman, his nephew, who
-waited on him at his chambers, in such form and ceremony, seem not
-to have settled the order of their precedence to this hour; and we
-should hope the Upholsterer and his companions in the Green Park
-stand as fair a chance for immortality as some modern politicians.
-Mr. Bickerstaff himself is a gentleman and a scholar, a humourist
-and a man of the world; with a great deal of nice easy <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">naïveté</span></i> about
-him. If he walks out and is caught in a shower of rain, he makes
-us amends for this unlucky accident, by a criticism on the shower in
-Virgil, and concludes with a burlesque copy of verses on a city-shower.
-He entertains us, when he dates from his own apartment, with
-a quotation from Plutarch or a moral reflection; from the Grecian
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>coffeehouse with politics; and from Will’s or the Temple with the
-poets and players, the beaux and men of wit and pleasure about town.
-In reading the pages of the <cite>Tatler</cite>, we seem as if suddenly transported to
-the age of Queen Anne, of toupees and full-bottomed periwigs. The
-whole appearance of our dress and manners undergoes a delightful
-metamorphosis. We are surprised with the rustling of hoops and the
-glittering of paste buckles. The beaux and the belles are of a quite
-different species; we distinguish the dappers, the smarts, and the
-pretty fellows, as they pass; we are introduced to Betterton and Mrs.
-Oldfield behind the scenes; are made familiar with the persons of
-Mr. Penkethman and Mr. Bullock; we listen to a dispute at a
-tavern on the merits of the Duke of Marlborough or Marshal
-Turenne; or are present at the first rehearsal of a play by Vanbrugh,
-or the reading of a new poem by Mr. Pope.—The privilege of thus
-virtually transporting ourselves to past times, is even greater than that
-of visiting distant places. London, a hundred years ago, would be
-better worth seeing than Paris at the present moment.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It may be said that all this is to be found, in the same or a greater
-degree, in the <cite>Spectator</cite>. We do not think so; or, at least, there is
-in the last work a much greater proportion of common-place matter.
-We have always preferred the <cite>Tatler</cite> to the <cite>Spectator</cite>. Whether it is
-owing to our having been earlier or better acquainted with the one
-than the other, our pleasure in reading the two works is not at all in
-proportion to their comparative reputation. The <cite>Tatler</cite> contains only
-half the number of volumes, and we will venture to say, at least an
-equal quantity of sterling wit and sense. ‘The first sprightly runnings’
-are there: it has more of the original spirit, more of the freshness and
-stamp of nature. The indications of character and strokes of humour
-are more true and frequent, the reflections that suggest themselves
-arise more from the occasion, and are less spun out into regular dissertations.
-They are more like the remarks which occur in sensible
-conversation, and less like a lecture. Something is left to the understanding
-of the reader. Steele seems to have gone into his closet
-only to set down what he observed out-of-doors; Addison seems to
-have spun out and wire-drawn the hints, which he borrowed from
-Steele, or took from nature, to the utmost. We do not mean to
-depreciate Addison’s talents, but we wish to do justice to Steele,
-who was, upon the whole, a less artificial and more original writer.
-The descriptions of Steele resemble loose sketches or fragments of a
-comedy; those of Addison are ingenious paraphrases on the genuine
-text. The characters of the club, not only in the <cite>Tatler</cite>, but in the
-<cite>Spectator</cite>, were drawn by Steele. That of Sir Roger de Coverley is
-among them. Addison has gained himself eternal honour by his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>manner of filling up this last character. Those of Will Wimble and
-Will Honeycomb are not a whit behind it in delicacy and felicity.
-Many of the most exquisite pieces in the <cite>Tatler</cite> are also Addison’s,
-as the Court of Honour, and the Personification of Musical
-Instruments. We do not know whether the picture of the family of
-an old acquaintance, in which the children run to let Mr. Bickerstaff
-in at the door, and the one that loses the race that way turns back to
-tell the father that he is come,—with the nice gradation of incredulity
-in the little boy, who is got into <cite>Guy of Warwick</cite> and <cite>The Seven
-Champions</cite>, and who shakes his head at the veracity of <cite>Æsop’s Fables</cite>,—is
-Steele’s or Addison’s.<a id='r30' /><a href='#f30' class='c012'><sup>[30]</sup></a> The account of the two sisters, one of whom
-held her head up higher than ordinary, from having on a pair of flowered
-garters, and of the married lady who complained to the <cite>Tatler</cite> of the
-neglect of her husband, are unquestionably Steele’s. If the <cite>Tatler</cite> is
-not inferior to the <cite>Spectator</cite> in manners and character, it is very
-superior to it in the interest of many of the stories. Several of
-the incidents related by Steele have never been surpassed in the heart-rending
-pathos of private distress. We might refer to those of the lover
-and his mistress when the theatre caught fire, of the bridegroom who,
-by accident, kills his bride on the day of their marriage, the story of
-Mr. Eustace and his wife, and the fine dream about his own mistress
-when a youth. What has given its superior popularity to the
-<cite>Spectator</cite>, is the greater gravity of its pretensions, its moral dissertations
-and critical reasonings, by which we confess we are less edified than
-by other things. Systems and opinions change, but nature is always
-true. It is the extremely moral and didactic tone of the <cite>Spectator</cite>
-which makes us apt to think of Addison (according to Mandeville’s
-sarcasm) as ‘a parson in a tie-wig.’ Some of the moral essays are,
-however, exquisitely beautiful and happy. Such are the reflections in
-Westminster Abbey, on the Royal Exchange, and some very affecting
-ones on the death of a young lady. These, it must be allowed,
-are the perfection of elegant sermonising. His critical essays we do
-not think quite so good. We prefer Steele’s occasional selection of
-beautiful poetical passages, without any affectation of analysing their
-beauties, to Addison’s fine-spun theories. The best criticism in the
-<cite>Spectator</cite>, that on the <cite>Cartoons</cite> of Raphael, is by Steele. We owed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>this acknowledgment to a writer who has so often put us in good
-humour with ourselves and every thing about us, when few things
-else could.<a id='r31' /><a href='#f31' class='c012'><sup>[31]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>W. H.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>No. 4.</span>]&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; ON MODERN COMEDY&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; [<span class='sc'>Aug. 20, 1815.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>The question which has often been asked, <em>Why there are so few
-good modern Comedies?</em> appears in a great measure to answer itself.
-It is because so many excellent Comedies have been written, that there
-are none written at present. Comedy naturally wears itself out—destroys
-the very food on which it lives; and by constantly and
-successfully exposing the follies and weaknesses of mankind to ridicule,
-in the end leaves itself nothing worth laughing at. It holds the mirror
-up to nature; and men, seeing their most striking peculiarities and
-defects pass in gay review before them, learn either to avoid or conceal
-them. It is not the criticism which the public taste exercises
-upon the stage, but the criticism which the stage exercises upon
-public manners, that is fatal to comedy, by rendering the subject-matter
-of it tame, correct, and spiritless. We are drilled into a sort of
-stupid decorum, and forced to wear the same dull uniform of outward
-appearance; and yet it is asked, why the Comic Muse does not point,
-as she was wont, at the peculiarities of our gait and gesture, and
-exhibit the picturesque contrast of our dress and costume, in all that
-graceful variety in which she delights. The genuine source of comic
-writing,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Where it must live, or have no life at all,’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>is undoubtedly to be found in the distinguishing peculiarities of men
-and manners. Now, this distinction can subsist, so as to be strong,
-pointed, and general, only while the manners of different classes are
-formed immediately by their particular circumstances, and the
-characters of individuals by their natural temperament and situation,
-without being everlastingly modified and neutralised by intercourse
-with the world—by knowledge and education. In a certain stage of
-society, men may be said to vegetate like trees, and to become rooted
-to the soil in which they grow. They have no idea of anything
-beyond themselves and their immediate sphere of action; they are, as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>it were, circumscribed, and defined by their particular circumstances;
-they are what their situation makes them, and nothing more. Each
-is absorbed in his own profession or pursuit, and each in his turn
-contracts that habitual peculiarity of manners and opinions, which
-makes him the subject of ridicule to others, and the sport of the Comic
-Muse. Thus the physician is nothing but a physician, the lawyer is a
-mere lawyer, the scholar degenerates into a pedant, the country squire
-is a different species of being from the fine gentleman, the citizen and
-the courtier inhabit a different world, and even the affectation of
-certain characters, in aping the follies or vices of their betters, only
-serves to show the immeasurable distance which custom or fortune has
-placed between them. Hence the early comic writers, taking advantage
-of this mixed and solid mass of ignorance, folly, pride, and
-prejudice, made those deep and lasting incisions into it,—have given
-those sharp and nice touches, that bold relief to their characters,—have
-opposed them in every variety of contrast and collision, of conscious
-self-satisfaction and mutual antipathy, with a power which can only
-find full scope in the same rich and inexhaustible materials. But in
-proportion as comic genius succeeds in taking off the mask from
-ignorance and conceit, as it teaches us to</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘See ourselves as others see us,’—</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>in proportion as we are brought out on the stage together, and our
-prejudices clash one against the other, our sharp angular points wear
-off; we are no longer rigid in absurdity, passionate in folly, and we
-prevent the ridicule directed at our habitual foibles, by laughing at them
-ourselves.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>If it be said, that there is the same fund of absurdity and prejudice
-in the world as ever—that there are the same unaccountable perversities
-lurking at the bottom of every breast,—I should answer, be it
-so: but at least we keep our follies to ourselves as much as possible—we
-palliate, shuffle, and equivocate with them—they sneak into by-corners,
-and do not, like <em>Chaucer’s Canterbury Pilgrims</em>, march along
-the highroad, and form a procession—they do not entrench themselves
-strongly behind custom and precedent—they are not embodied in professions
-and ranks in life—they are not organised into a system—they
-do not openly resort to a standard, but are a sort of straggling nondescripts,
-that, like <em>Wart</em>, ‘present no mark to the foeman.’ As to the
-gross and palpable absurdities of modern manners, they are too shallow
-and barefaced, and those who affect, are too little <em>serious</em> in them, to
-make them worth the detection of the Comic Muse. They proceed
-from an idle, impudent affectation of folly in general, in the dashing
-<em>bravura</em> style, not from an infatuation with any of its characteristic
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>modes. In short, the proper object of ridicule is <em>egotism</em>; and a man
-cannot be a very great egotist who every day sees himself represented
-on the stage. We are deficient in Comedy, because we are without
-characters in real life—as we have no historical pictures, because we
-have no faces proper for them.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is, indeed, the evident tendency of all literature to generalise
-and <em>dissipate</em> character, by giving men the same artificial education,
-and the same common stock of ideas; so that we see all objects from
-the same point of view, and through the same reflected medium;—we
-learn to exist, not in ourselves, but in books;—all men become alike
-mere readers—spectators, not actors in the scene, and lose all proper
-personal identity. The templar, the wit, the man of pleasure, and
-the man of fashion, the courtier and the citizen, the knight and the
-squire, the lover and the miser—<cite>Lovelace</cite>, <cite>Lothario</cite>, <cite>Will Honeycomb</cite>,
-and <cite>Sir Roger de Coverley</cite>, <cite>Sparkish</cite> and <cite>Lord Foppington</cite>, <cite>Western</cite>
-and <cite>Tom Jones</cite>, <cite>My Father</cite>, and <cite>My Uncle Toby</cite>, <cite>Millamant</cite> and
-<cite>Sir Sampson Legend</cite>, <cite>Don Quixote</cite> and <cite>Sancho</cite>, <cite>Gil Blas</cite> and <cite>Guzman
-d’Alfarache</cite>, <cite>Count Fathom</cite> and <cite>Joseph Surface</cite>,—have all met, and
-exchanged common-places on the barren plains of the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">haute littérature</span></i>—toil
-slowly on to the Temple of Science, seen a long way off upon
-a level, and end in one dull compound of politics, criticism, chemistry,
-and metaphysics!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>We cannot expect to reconcile opposite things. If, for example,
-any of us were to put ourselves into the stage-coach from Salisbury
-to London, it is more than probable we should not meet with the
-same number of odd accidents, or ludicrous distresses on the road,
-that befell <em>Parson Adams</em>; but why, if we get into a common
-vehicle, and submit to the conveniences of modern travelling, should
-we complain of the want of adventures? Modern manners may be
-compared to a modern stage-coach: our limbs may be a little cramped
-with the confinement, and we may grow drowsy; but we arrive safe,
-without any very amusing or very sad accident, at our journey’s end.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Again, the alterations which have taken place in conversation and
-dress in the same period, have been by no means favourable to Comedy.
-The present prevailing style of conversation is not <em>personal</em>, but critical
-and analytical. It consists almost entirely in the discussion of general
-topics, in dissertations on philosophy or taste: and Congreve would
-be able to derive no better hints from the conversations of our toilettes
-or drawing-rooms, for the exquisite raillery or poignant repartee of his
-dialogues, than from a deliberation of the Royal Society. In the
-same manner, the extreme simplicity and graceful uniformity of
-modern dress, however favourable to the arts, has certainly stript
-Comedy of one of its richest ornaments and most expressive symbols.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>The sweeping pall and buskin, and nodding plume, were never more
-serviceable to Tragedy, than the enormous hoops and stiff stays worn
-by the belles of former days were to the intrigues of Comedy. They
-assisted wonderfully in heightening the mysteries of the passion, and
-adding to the intricacy of the plot. Wycherley and Vanbrugh could
-not have spared the dresses of Vandyke. These strange fancy-dresses,
-perverse disguises, and counterfeit shapes, gave an agreeable
-scope to the imagination. ‘That sevenfold fence’ was a sort of foil
-to the lusciousness of the dialogue, and a barrier against the sly
-encroachments of <em>double entendre</em>. The greedy eye and bold hand
-of indiscretion were repressed, which gave a greater licence to the
-tongue. The senses were not to be gratified in an instant. Love
-was entangled in the folds of the swelling handkerchief, and the
-desires might wander for ever round the circumference of a quilted
-petticoat, or find a rich lodging in the flowers of a damask stomacher.
-There was room for years of patient contrivance, for a thousand
-thoughts, schemes, conjectures, hopes, fears, and wishes. There
-seemed no end of difficulties and delays; to overcome so many
-obstacles was the work of ages. A mistress was an angel concealed
-behind whalebone, flounces, and brocade. What an undertaking to
-penetrate through the disguise! What an impulse must it give to
-the blood, what a keenness to the invention, what a volubility to the
-tongue! ‘Mr. Smirk, you are a brisk man,’ was then the most
-significant commendation. But now-a-days—a woman can be <em>but
-undressed</em>!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The same account might be extended to Tragedy. Aristotle has
-long since said, that Tragedy purifies the mind by terror and pity;
-that is, substitutes an artificial and intellectual interest for real passion.
-Tragedy, like Comedy, must therefore defeat itself; for its patterns
-must be drawn from the living models within the breast, from feeling
-or from observation; and the materials of Tragedy cannot be found
-among a people, who are the habitual spectators of Tragedy, whose
-interests and passions are not their own, but ideal, remote, sentimental,
-and abstracted. It is for this reason chiefly, we conceive,
-that the highest efforts of the Tragic Muse are in general the earliest;
-where the strong impulses of nature are not lost in the refinements
-and glosses of art; where the writers themselves, and those whom
-they saw about them, had ‘warm hearts of flesh and blood beating
-in their bosoms, and were not embowelled of their natural entrails,
-and stuffed with paltry blurred sheets of paper.’ Shakspeare, with
-all his genius, could not have written as he did, if he had lived in
-the present times. Nature would not have presented itself to him
-in the same freshness and vigour; he must have seen it through all
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>the refractions of successive dullness, and his powers would have
-languished in the dense atmosphere of logic and criticism. ‘Men’s
-minds,’ he somewhere says, ‘are parcel of their fortunes’; and his
-age was necessary to him. It was this which enabled him to grapple
-at once with Nature, and which stamped his characters with her
-image and superscription.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>W. H.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>No. 5.</span>]&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; ON MR. KEAN’S IAGO&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; [<span class='sc'>July 24, 1814.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>We certainly think Mr. Kean’s performance of the part of Iago one
-of the most extraordinary exhibitions on the stage. There is no
-one within our remembrance who has so completely foiled the critics
-as this celebrated actor: one sagacious person imagines that he
-must perform a part in a certain manner,—another virtuoso chalks out
-a different path for him; and when the time comes, he does the
-whole off in a way that neither of them had the least conception of,
-and which both of them are therefore very ready to condemn as
-entirely wrong. It was ever the trick of genius to be thus. We
-confess that Mr. Kean has thrown us out more than once. For
-instance, we are very much inclined to adopt the opinion of a contemporary
-critic, that his <cite>Richard</cite> is not gay enough, and that his
-<cite>Iago</cite> is not grave enough. This he may perhaps conceive to be the
-mere caprice of idle criticism; but we will try to give our reasons,
-and shall leave them to Mr. Kean’s better judgment. It is to
-be remembered, then, that <em>Richard</em> was a princely villain, borne
-along in a sort of triumphal car of royal state, buoyed up with the
-hopes and privileges of his birth, reposing even on the sanctity of
-religion, trampling on his devoted victims without remorse, and who
-looked out and laughed from the high watch-tower of his confidence
-and his expectations on the desolation and misery he had caused
-around him. He held on his way, unquestioned, ‘hedged in with
-the divinity of kings,’ amenable to no tribunal, and abusing his power
-<em>in contempt of mankind</em>. But as for <em>Iago</em>, we conceive differently of
-him. He had not the same natural advantages. He was a mere
-adventurer in mischief, a pains-taking plodding knave, without patent
-or pedigree, who was obliged to work his up-hill way by wit, not by
-will, and to be the founder of his own fortune. He was, if we may
-be allowed a vulgar allusion, a sort of prototype of modern Jacobinism,
-who thought that talents ought to decide the place,—a man of ‘morbid
-sensibility,’ (in the fashionable phrase), full of distrust, of hatred, of
-anxious and corroding thoughts, and who, though he might assume
-a temporary superiority over others by superior adroitness, and pride
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>himself in his skill, could not be supposed to assume it as a matter
-of course, as if he had been entitled to it from his birth. We do not
-here mean to enter into the characters of the two men, but something
-must be allowed to the difference of their situations. There might
-be the same insensibility in both as to the end in view, but there could
-not well be the same security as to the success of the means. <em>Iago</em>
-had to pass through a different ordeal: he had no appliances and
-means to boot; no royal road to the completion of his tragedy. His
-pretensions were not backed by authority; they were not baptized at
-the font; they were not holy-waterproof. He had the whole to
-answer for in his own person, and could not shift the responsibility
-to the heads of others. Mr. Kean’s <cite>Richard</cite> was, therefore, we
-think, deficient in something of that regal jollity and reeling triumph
-of success which the part would bear; but this we can easily account
-for, because it is the traditional commonplace idea of the character,
-that he is to ‘play the dog—to bite and snarl.’—The extreme unconcern
-and laboured levity of his <cite>Iago</cite>, on the contrary, is a
-refinement and original device of the actor’s own mind, and therefore
-deserves consideration. The character of <em>Iago</em>, in fact, belongs to
-a class of characters common to Shakspeare, and at the same time
-peculiar to him—namely, that of great intellectual activity, accompanied
-with a total want of moral principle, and therefore displaying
-itself at the constant expence of others, making use of reason as a
-pander to will—employing its ingenuity and its resources to palliate
-its own crimes and aggravate the faults of others, and seeking to
-confound the practical distinctions of right and wrong, by referring
-them to some overstrained standard of speculative refinement.—Some
-persons, more nice than wise, have thought the whole of the character
-of <em>Iago</em> unnatural. Shakspeare, who was quite as good a philosopher
-as he was a poet, thought otherwise. He knew that the love of
-power, which is another name for the love of mischief, was natural
-to man. He would know this as well or better than if it had been
-demonstrated to him by a logical diagram, merely from seeing children
-paddle in the dirt, or kill flies for sport. We might ask those who
-think the character of <em>Iago</em> not natural, why they go to see it performed,
-but from the interest it excites, the sharper edge which it
-sets on their curiosity and imagination? Why do we go to see
-tragedies in general? Why do we always read the accounts in the
-newspapers of dreadful fires and shocking murders, but for the same
-reason? Why do so many persons frequent executions and trials,
-or why do the lower classes almost universally take delight in barbarous
-sports and cruelty to animals, but because there is a natural
-tendency in the mind to strong excitement, a desire to have its
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>faculties roused and stimulated to the utmost? Whenever this
-principle is not under the restraint of humanity, or the sense of moral
-obligation, there are no excesses to which it will not of itself give
-rise, without the assistance of any other motive, either of passion or
-self-interest. <em>Iago</em> is only an extreme instance of the kind; that is,
-of diseased intellectual activity, with an almost perfect indifference
-to moral good or evil, or rather with a preference of the latter,
-because it falls more in with his favourite propensity, gives greater
-zest to his thoughts, and scope to his actions.—Be it observed, too,
-(for the sake of those who are for squaring all human actions by
-the maxims of Rochefoucault), that he is quite or nearly as indifferent
-to his own fate as to that of others; that he runs all risks for a
-trifling and doubtful advantage; and is himself the dupe and victim
-of his ruling passion—an incorrigible love of mischief—an insatiable
-craving after action of the most difficult and dangerous kind. Our
-‘Ancient’ is a philosopher, who fancies that a lie that kills has more
-point in it than an alliteration or an antithesis; who thinks a fatal
-experiment on the peace of a family a better thing than watching the
-palpitations in the heart of a flea in an air-pump; who plots the ruin
-of his friends as an exercise for his understanding, and stabs men in
-the dark to prevent <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">ennui</span></i>. Now this, though it be sport, yet it is
-dreadful sport. There is no room for trifling and indifference, nor
-scarcely for the appearance of it; the very object of his whole plot
-is to keep his faculties stretched on the rack, in a state of watch and
-ward, in a sort of breathless suspense, without a moment’s interval
-of repose. He has a desperate stake to play for, like a man who
-fences with poisoned weapons, and has business enough on his hands
-to call for the whole stock of his sober circumspection, his dark
-duplicity, and insidious gravity. He resembles a man who sits down
-to play at chess, for the sake of the difficulty and complication of the
-game, and who immediately becomes absorbed in it. His amusements,
-if they are amusements, are severe and saturnine—even his wit
-blisters. His gaiety arises from the success of his treachery; his
-ease from the sense of the torture he has inflicted on others. Even,
-if other circumstances permitted it, the part he has to play with
-<cite>Othello</cite> requires that he should assume the most serious concern, and
-something of the plausibility of a confessor. ‘His cue is villainous
-melancholy, with a sigh like Tom o’ Bedlam.’ He is repeatedly
-called ‘honest <em>Iago</em>,’ which looks as if there were something suspicious
-in his appearance, which admitted a different construction. The tone
-which he adopts in the scenes with <em>Roderigo</em>, <em>Desdemona</em>, and <em>Cassio</em>,
-is only a relaxation from the more arduous business of the play. Yet
-there is in all his conversation an inveterate misanthropy, a licentious
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>keenness of perception, which is always sagacious of evil, and snuffs
-up the tainted scent of its quarry with rancorous delight. An
-exuberance of spleen is the essence of the character. The view
-which we have here taken of the subject (if at all correct) will not
-therefore justify the extreme alteration which Mr. Kean has introduced
-into the part. Actors in general have been struck only with
-the wickedness of the character, and have exhibited an assassin going
-to the place of execution. Mr. Kean has abstracted the wit of the
-character, and makes <em>Iago</em> appear throughout an excellent good fellow,
-and lively bottle-companion. But though we do not wish him to be
-represented as a monster, or fiend, we see no reason why he should
-instantly be converted into a pattern of comic gaiety and good-humour.
-The light which illumines the character should rather resemble the
-flashes of lightning in the mirky sky, which make the darkness more
-terrible. Mr. Kean’s <cite>Iago</cite> is, we suspect, too much in the sun. His
-manner of acting the part would have suited better with the character
-of <em>Edmund</em> in <cite>King Lear</cite>, who, though in other respects much the
-same, has a spice of gallantry in his constitution, and has the favour
-and countenance of the ladies, which always gives a man the smug
-appearance of a bridegroom!</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>W. H.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>No. 6.</span>]&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; ON THE LOVE OF THE COUNTRY&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; [<span class='sc'>Nov. 27, 1814.</span></h3>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>TO THE EDITOR OF THE ROUND TABLE.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='sc'>Sir</span>,—I do not know that any one has ever explained satisfactorily
-the true source of our attachment to natural objects, or of that soothing
-emotion which the sight of the country hardly ever fails to infuse
-into the mind. Some persons have ascribed this feeling to the natural
-beauty of the objects themselves, others to the freedom from care,
-the silence and tranquillity which scenes of retirement afford—others
-to the healthy and innocent employments of a country life—others to
-the simplicity of country manners—and others to different causes;
-but none to the right one. All these causes may, I believe, have a
-share in producing this feeling; but there is another more general
-principle, which has been left untouched, and which I shall here
-explain, endeavouring to be as little sentimental as the subject will
-admit.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Rousseau, in his Confessions, (the most valuable of all his works),
-relates, that when he took possession of his room at Annecy, at the
-house of his beloved mistress and friend, he found that he could see ‘a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>little spot of green’ from his window, which endeared his situation
-the more to him, because, he says, it was the first time he had had
-this object constantly before him since he left Boissy, the place where
-he was at school when a child.<a id='r32' /><a href='#f32' class='c012'><sup>[32]</sup></a> Some such feeling as that here
-described will be found lurking at the bottom of all our attachments of
-this sort. Were it not for the recollections habitually associated with
-them, natural objects could not interest the mind in the manner they
-do. No doubt, the sky is beautiful; the clouds sail majestically along
-its bosom; the sun is cheering; there is something exquisitely graceful
-in the manner in which a plant or tree puts forth its branches; the
-motion with which they bend and tremble in the evening breeze is
-soft and lovely; there is music in the babbling of a brook; the view
-from the top of a mountain is full of grandeur; nor can we behold
-the ocean with indifference. Or, as the Minstrel sweetly sings—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Oh how can’st thou renounce the boundless store</div>
- <div class='line'>Of charms which Nature to her votary yields!</div>
- <div class='line'>The warbling woodland, the resounding shore,</div>
- <div class='line'>The pomp of groves, and garniture of fields;</div>
- <div class='line'>All that the genial ray of morning gilds,</div>
- <div class='line'>And all that echoes to the song of even,</div>
- <div class='line'>All that the mountain’s sheltering bosom shields,</div>
- <div class='line'>And all the dread magnificence of heaven,</div>
- <div class='line'>Oh how can’st thou renounce, and hope to be forgiven!’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is not, however, the beautiful and magnificent alone that
-we admire in Nature; the most insignificant and rudest objects are
-often found connected with the strongest emotions; we become
-attached to the most common and familiar images as to the face of a
-friend whom we have long known, and from whom we have received
-many benefits. It is because natural objects have been associated
-with the sports of our childhood, with air and exercise, with our
-feelings in solitude, when the mind takes the strongest hold of things,
-and clings with the fondest interest to whatever strikes its attention;
-with change of place, the pursuit of new scenes, and thoughts of
-distant friends: it is because they have surrounded us in almost all
-situations, in joy and in sorrow, in pleasure and in pain; because they
-have been one chief source and nourishment of our feelings, and a
-part of our being, that we love them as we do ourselves.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There is, generally speaking, the same foundation for our love of
-Nature as for all our habitual attachments, namely, association of
-ideas. But this is not all. That which distinguishes this attachment
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>from others is the transferable nature of our feelings with respect to
-physical objects; the associations connected with any one object
-extending to the whole class. My having been attached to any particular
-person does not make me feel the same attachment to the next
-person I may chance to meet; but, if I have once associated strong
-feelings of delight with the objects of natural scenery, the tie becomes
-indissoluble, and I shall ever after feel the same attachment to other
-objects of the same sort. I remember when I was abroad, the trees,
-and grass, and wet leaves, rustling in the walks of the Thuilleries, seemed
-to be as much English, to be as much the same trees and grass, that I
-had always been used to, as the sun shining over my head was the
-same sun which I saw in England; the faces only were foreign to
-me. Whence comes this difference? It arises from our always
-imperceptibly connecting the idea of the individual with man, and only
-the idea of the class with natural objects. In the one case, the
-external appearance or physical structure is the least thing to be
-attended to; in the other, it is every thing. The springs that move
-the human form, and make it friendly or adverse to me, lie hid within
-it. There is an infinity of motives, passions, and ideas contained in
-that narrow compass, of which I know nothing, and in which I have
-no share. Each individual is a world to himself, governed by a
-thousand contradictory and wayward impulses. I can, therefore,
-make no inference from one individual to another; nor can my habitual
-sentiments, with respect to any individual, extend beyond himself to
-others. But it is otherwise with respect to Nature. There is neither
-hypocrisy, caprice, nor mental reservation in her favours. Our intercourse
-with her is not liable to accident or change, interruption or
-disappointment. She smiles on us still the same. Thus, to give an
-obvious instance, if I have once enjoyed the cool shade of a tree, and
-been lulled into a deep repose by the sound of a brook running at its
-feet, I am sure that wherever I can find a tree and a brook, I can
-enjoy the same pleasure again. Hence, when I imagine these objects,
-I can easily form a mystic personification of the friendly power that
-inhabits them, Dryad or Naiad, offering its cool fountain or its tempting
-shade. Hence the origin of the Grecian mythology. All
-objects of the same kind being the same, not only in their appearance,
-but in their practical uses, we habitually confound them together under
-the same general idea; and, whatever fondness we may have conceived
-for one, is immediately placed to the common account. The most
-opposite kinds and remote trains of feeling gradually go to enrich the
-same sentiment; and in our love of Nature, there is all the force of
-individual attachment, combined with the most airy abstraction. It is
-this circumstance which gives that refinement, expansion, and wild
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>interest to feelings of this sort, when strongly excited, which every
-one must have experienced who is a true lover of Nature. The
-sight of the setting sun does not affect me so much from the beauty
-of the object itself, from the glory kindled through the glowing skies,
-the rich broken columns of light, or the dying streaks of day, as that
-it indistinctly recalls to me numberless thoughts and feelings with
-which, through many a year and season, I have watched his bright
-descent in the warm summer evenings, or beheld him struggling to cast
-a ‘farewel sweet’ through the thick clouds of winter. I love to see
-the trees first covered with leaves in the spring, the primroses peeping
-out from some sheltered bank, and the innocent lambs running races
-on the soft green turf; because, at that birth-time of Nature, I have
-always felt sweet hopes and happy wishes—which have not been
-fulfilled! The dry reeds rustling on the side of a stream,—the woods
-swept by the loud blast,—the dark massy foliage of autumn,—the grey
-trunks and naked branches of the trees in winter,—the sequestered
-copse and wide extended heath,—the warm sunny showers, and
-December snows,—have all charms for me; there is no object, however
-trifling or rude, that has not, in some mood or other, found
-the way to my heart; and I might say, in the words of the poet,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘To me the meanest flower that blows can give</div>
- <div class='line'>Thoughts that do often lie too deep for tears.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Thus Nature is a kind of universal home, and every object it presents
-to us an old acquaintance with unaltered looks.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in6'>——‘Nature did ne’er betray</div>
- <div class='line'>The heart that lov’d her, but through all the years</div>
- <div class='line'>Of this our life, it is her privilege</div>
- <div class='line'>To lead from joy to joy.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>For there is that consent and mutual harmony among all her works,
-one undivided spirit pervading them throughout, that, if we have
-once knit ourselves in hearty fellowship to any of them, they will
-never afterwards appear as strangers to us, but, which ever way we turn,
-we shall find a secret power to have gone out before us, moulding
-them into such shapes as fancy loves, informing them with life and
-sympathy, bidding them put on their festive looks and gayest attire at
-our approach, and to pour all their sweets and choicest treasures at
-our feet. For him, then, who has well acquainted himself with
-Nature’s works, she wears always one face, and speaks the same well-known
-language, striking on the heart, amidst unquiet thoughts and
-the tumult of the world, like the music of one’s native tongue heard
-in some far-off country.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>We do not connect the same feelings with the works of art as with
-those of nature, because we refer them to man, and associate with
-them the separate interests and passions which we know belong to
-those who are the authors or possessors of them. Nevertheless, there
-are some such objects, as a cottage, or a village church, which excite
-in us the same sensations as the sight of nature, and which are,
-indeed, almost always included in descriptions of natural scenery.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Or from the mountain’s sides</div>
- <div class='line'>View wilds and swelling floods,</div>
- <div class='line'>And hamlets brown, and dim-discover’d spires,</div>
- <div class='line'>And hear their simple bell.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Which is in part, no doubt, because they are surrounded with natural
-objects, and, in a populous country, inseparable from them; and also
-because the human interest they excite relates to manners and feelings
-which are simple, common, such as all can enter into, and which,
-therefore, always produce a pleasing effect upon the mind.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>A.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>No. 7.</span>]&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; ON POSTHUMOUS FAME,—WHETHER SHAKSPEARE WAS INFLUENCED BY A LOVE OF IT?&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; [<span class='sc'>May 22, 1814.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>It has been much disputed whether Shakspeare was actuated by the
-love of fame, though the question has been thought by others not to
-admit of any doubt, on the ground that it was impossible for any man
-of great genius to be without this feeling. It was supposed, that that
-immortality, which was the natural inheritance of men of powerful
-genius, must be ever present to their minds, as the reward, the object,
-and the animating spring, of all their efforts. This conclusion
-does not appear to be well founded, and that for the following
-reasons:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>First, The love of fame is the offspring of taste, rather than of
-genius. The love of fame implies a knowledge of its existence.
-The men of the greatest genius, whether poets or philosophers, who
-lived in the first ages of society, only just emerging from the gloom of
-ignorance and barbarism, could not be supposed to have much idea of
-those long trails of lasting glory which they were to leave behind
-them, and of which there were as yet no examples. But, after such
-men, inspired by the love of truth and nature, have struck out those
-lights which become the gaze and admiration of after times,—when
-those who succeed in distant generations read with wondering
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>rapture the works which the bards and sages of antiquity have bequeathed
-to them,—when they contemplate the imperishable power of
-intellect which survives the stroke of death and the revolutions of
-empire,—it is then that the passion for fame becomes an habitual feeling
-in the mind, and that men naturally wish to excite the same
-sentiments of admiration in others which they themselves have felt,
-and to transmit their names with the same honours to posterity. It is
-from the fond enthusiastic veneration with which we recal the names
-of the celebrated men of past times, and the idolatrous worship we
-pay to their memories, that we learn what a delicious thing fame is,
-and would willingly make any efforts or sacrifices to be thought of
-in the same way. It is in the true spirit of this feeling that a modern
-writer exclaims—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Blessings be with them, and eternal praise,</div>
- <div class='line'>The poets—who on earth have made us heirs</div>
- <div class='line'>Of truth and pure delight in deathless lays!</div>
- <div class='line'>Oh! might my name be number’d among theirs,</div>
- <div class='line'>Then gladly would I end my mortal days!’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The love of fame is a species of emulation; or, in other words, the
-love of admiration is in proportion to the admiration with which the
-works of the highest genius have inspired us, to the delight we have
-received from their habitual contemplation, and to our participation in
-the general enthusiasm with which they have been regarded by mankind.
-Thus there is little of this feeling discoverable in the Greek
-writers, whose ideas of posthumous fame seem to have been confined
-to the glory of heroic actions; whereas the Roman poets and
-orators, stimulated by the reputation which their predecessors had
-acquired, and having those exquisite models constantly before their
-eyes, are full of it. So Milton, whose capacious mind was imbued
-with the rich stores of sacred and of classic lore, to whom learning
-opened her inmost page, and whose eye seemed to be ever bent back
-to the great models of antiquity, was, it is evident, deeply impressed
-with a feeling of lofty emulation, and a strong desire to produce some
-work of lasting and equal reputation:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in14'>——‘Nor sometimes forget</div>
- <div class='line'>Those other two, equall’d with me in fate,</div>
- <div class='line'>So were I equall’d with them in renown,</div>
- <div class='line'>Blind Thamyris and blind Mæonides,</div>
- <div class='line'>And Tiresias and Phineus, prophets old.’<a id='r33' /><a href='#f33' class='c012'><sup>[33]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>Spenser, who was a man of learning, had a high opinion of the regard
-due to ‘famous poets’ wit’; and Lord Bacon, whose vanity is as well
-known as his excessive adulation of that of others, asks, in a tone
-of proud exultation, ‘Have not the poems of Homer lasted five-and-twenty
-hundred years, and not a syllable of them is lost?’
-Chaucer seems to have derived his notions of fame more immediately
-from the reputation acquired by the Italian poets, his contemporaries,
-which had at that time spread itself over Europe; while the latter,
-who were the first to unlock the springs of ancient learning, and who
-slaked their thirst of knowledge at that pure fountain-head, would
-naturally imbibe the same feeling from its highest source. Thus,
-Dante has conveyed the finest image that can perhaps be conceived of
-the power of this principle over the human mind, when he describes
-the heroes and celebrated men of antiquity as ‘serene and smiling,’
-though in the shades of death,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in6'>——‘Because on earth their names</div>
- <div class='line'>In Fame’s eternal volume shine for aye.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>But it is not so in Shakspeare. There is scarcely the slightest trace
-of any such feeling in his writings, nor any appearance of anxiety for
-their fate, or of a desire to perfect them or make them worthy of that
-immortality to which they were destined. And this indifference may
-be accounted for from the very circumstance, that he was almost
-entirely a man of genius, or that in him this faculty bore sway over
-every other: he was either not intimately conversant with the productions
-of the great writers who had gone before him, or at least was
-not much indebted to them: he revelled in the world of observation
-and of fancy; and perhaps his mind was of too prolific and active
-a kind to dwell with intense and continued interest on the images of
-beauty or of grandeur presented to it by the genius of others. He
-seemed scarcely to have an individual existence of his own, but to
-borrow that of others at will, and to pass successively through ‘every
-variety of untried being,’—to be now <cite>Hamlet</cite>, now <cite>Othello</cite>, now
-<cite>Lear</cite>, now <cite>Falstaff</cite>, now <cite>Ariel</cite>. In the mingled interests and feelings
-belonging to this wide range of imaginary reality, in the tumult and
-rapid transitions of this waking dream, the author could not easily
-find time to think of himself, nor wish to embody that personal
-identity in idle reputation after death, of which he was so little
-tenacious while living. To feel a strong desire that others should
-think highly of us, it is, in general, necessary that we should think
-highly of ourselves. There is something of egotism, and even
-pedantry, in this sentiment; and there is no author who was so little
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>tinctured with these as Shakspeare. The passion for fame, like other
-passions, requires an exclusive and exaggerated admiration of its
-object, and attaches more consequence to literary attainments and
-pursuits than they really possess. Shakspeare had looked too much
-abroad into the world, and his views of things were of too universal
-and comprehensive a cast, not to have taught him to estimate the
-importance of posthumous fame according to its true value and relative
-proportions. Though he might have some conception of his future
-fame, he could not but feel the contrast between that and his actual
-situation; and, indeed, he complains bitterly of the latter in one of
-his sonnets.<a id='r34' /><a href='#f34' class='c012'><sup>[34]</sup></a> He would perhaps think, that, to be the idol of
-posterity, when we are no more, was hardly a full compensation for
-being the object of the glance and scorn of fools while we are living;
-and that, in truth, this universal fame so much vaunted, was a vague
-phantom of blind enthusiasm; for what is the amount even of Shakspeare’s
-fame? That, in that very country which boasts his genius
-and his birth, perhaps not one person in ten has ever heard of his
-name, or read a syllable of his writings!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>We will add another observation in connection with this subject,
-which is, that men of the greatest genius produce their works with
-too much facility (and, as it were, spontaneously) to require the love
-of fame as a stimulus to their exertions, or to make them seem
-deserving of the admiration of mankind as their reward. It is, indeed,
-one characteristic mark of the highest class of excellence to appear
-to come naturally from the mind of the author, without consciousness
-or effort. The work seems like inspiration—to be the gift of some
-God or of the Muse. But it is the sense of difficulty which enhances
-the admiration of power, both in ourselves and in others. Hence it
-is that there is nothing so remote from vanity as true genius. It is
-almost as natural for those who are endowed with the highest powers
-of the human mind to produce the miracles of art, as for other men to
-breathe or move. Correggio, who is said to have produced some
-of his divinest works almost without having seen a picture, probably
-did not know that he had done anything extraordinary.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Z.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>
- <h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>No. 8.</span>]&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; ON HOGARTH’S MARRIAGE A-LA-MODE&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; [<span class='sc'>June 5, 1814.</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>The superiority of the pictures of Hogarth, which we have seen in
-the late collection at the British Institution, to the common prints, is
-confined chiefly to the <cite>Marriage a-la-Mode</cite>. We shall attempt to
-illustrate a few of their most striking excellencies, more particularly
-with reference to the expression of character. Their merits are
-indeed so prominent, and have been so often discussed, that it may be
-thought difficult to point out any new beauties; but they contain so
-much truth of nature, they present the objects to the eye under so
-many aspects and bearings, admit of so many constructions, and are
-so pregnant with meaning, that the subject is in a manner inexhaustible.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Boccacio, the most refined and sentimental of all the novel-writers,
-has been stigmatised as a mere inventor of licentious tales, because
-readers in general have only seized on those things in his works which
-were suited to their own taste, and have reflected their own grossness
-back upon the writer. So it has happened that the majority of critics
-having been most struck with the strong and decided expression in
-Hogarth, the extreme delicacy and subtle gradations of character in
-his pictures have almost entirely escaped them. In the first picture
-of the <cite>Marriage a-la-Mode</cite>, the three figures of the young Nobleman,
-his intended Bride, and her inamorato, the Lawyer, shew how much
-Hogarth excelled in the power of giving soft and effeminate expression.
-They have, however, been less noticed than the other figures, which
-tell a plainer story and convey a more palpable moral. Nothing can
-be more finely managed than the differences of character in these
-delicate personages. The Beau sits smiling at the looking-glass, with
-a reflected simper of self-admiration, and a languishing inclination of
-the head, while the rest of his body is perked up on his high heels
-with a certain air of tiptoe elevation. He is the Narcissus of the
-reign of George <span class='fss'>II.</span>, whose powdered peruke, ruffles, gold lace, and
-patches, divide his self-love unequally with his own person,—the true
-Sir Plume of his day;</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Of amber-lidded snuff-box justly vain,</div>
- <div class='line'>And the nice conduct of a clouded cane.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>There is the same felicity in the figure and attitude of the Bride,
-courted by the Lawyer. There is the utmost flexibility, and yielding
-softness in her whole person, a listless languor and tremulous suspense
-in the expression of her face. It is the precise look and air which
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>Pope has given to his favourite Belinda, just at the moment of the
-<cite>Rape of the Lock</cite>. The heightened glow, the forward intelligence,
-and loosened soul of love in the same face, in the assignation scene
-before the masquerade, form a fine and instructive contrast to the
-delicacy, timidity, and coy reluctance expressed in the first. The
-Lawyer in both pictures is much the same—perhaps too much so—though
-even this unmoved, unaltered appearance may be designed as
-characteristic. In both cases he has ‘a person, and a smooth dispose,
-framed to make woman false.’ He is full of that easy good-humour
-and easy good opinion of himself, with which the sex are delighted.
-There is not a sharp angle in his face to obstruct his success, or give
-a hint of doubt or difficulty. His whole aspect is round and rosy,
-lively and unmeaning, happy without the least expense of thought,
-careless and inviting; and conveys a perfect idea of the uninterrupted
-glide and pleasing murmur of the soft periods that flow from his
-tongue.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The expression of the Bride in the Morning Scene is the most
-highly seasoned, and at the same time the most vulgar in the series.
-The figure, face, and attitude of the Husband are inimitable. Hogarth
-has with great skill contrasted the pale countenance of the husband
-with the yellow whitish colour of the marble chimney-piece behind
-him, in such a manner as to preserve the fleshy tone of the former.
-The airy splendour of the view of the inner room in this picture is
-probably not exceeded by any of the productions of the Flemish School.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Young Girl in the third picture, who is represented as the
-victim of fashionable profligacy, is unquestionably one of the artist’s
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">chef-d’œuvres</span></span></i>. The exquisite delicacy of the painting is only surpassed
-by the felicity and subtlety of the conception. Nothing can
-be more striking than the contrast between the extreme softness
-of her person, and the hardened indifference of her character. The
-vacant stillness, the docility to vice, the premature suppression of
-youthful sensibility, the doll-like mechanism of the whole figure,
-which seems to have no other feeling but a sickly sense of pain,—shew
-the deepest insight into human nature, and into the effects of
-those refinements in depravity by which it has been good-naturedly
-asserted, that ‘vice loses half its evil in losing all its grossness.’ The
-story of this picture is in some parts very obscure and enigmatical.
-It is certain that the Nobleman is not looking straightforward to the
-Quack, whom he seems to have been threatening with his cane, but
-that his eyes are turned up with an ironical leer of triumph to the
-Procuress. The commanding attitude and size of this woman, the
-swelling circumference of her dress, spread out like a turkey-cock’s
-feathers,—the fierce, ungovernable, inveterate malignity of her countenance,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>which hardly needs the comment of the clasp-knife to explain
-her purpose, are all admirable in themselves, and still more so, as they
-are opposed to the mute insensibility, the elegant negligence of the
-dress, and the childish figure of the girl, who is supposed to be her
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">protégée</span></i>. As for the Quack, there can be no doubt entertained about
-him. His face seems as if it were composed of salve, and his
-features exhibit all the chaos and confusion of the most gross,
-ignorant, and impudent empiricism.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The gradations of ridiculous affectation in the Music Scene are
-finely imagined and preserved. The preposterous, overstrained
-admiration of the Lady of Quality, the sentimental, insipid, patient
-delight of the Man with his hair in papers and sipping his tea,—the
-pert, smirking, conceited, half-distorted approbation of the figure next
-to him, the transition to the total insensibility of the round face in
-profile, and then to the wonder of the Negro-boy at the rapture of
-his Mistress, form a perfect whole. The sanguine complexion and
-flame-coloured hair of the female Virtuoso throw an additional light
-on the character. This is lost in the print. The continuing the red
-colour of the hair into the back of the chair has been pointed out as
-one of those instances of alliteration in colouring, of which these
-pictures are everywhere full. The gross bloated appearance of the
-Italian Singer is well relieved by the hard features of the instrumental
-performer behind him, which might be carved of wood. The Negro-boy,
-holding the chocolate, both in expression, colour, and execution,
-is a master-piece. The gay, lively derision of the other Negro boy,
-playing with the Actæon, is an ingenious contrast to the profound
-amazement of the first. Some account has already been given of the
-two lovers in this picture. It is curious to observe the infinite activity
-of mind which the artist displays on every occasion. An instance
-occurs in the present picture. He has so contrived the papers in the
-hair of the Bride, as to make them look almost like a wreath of half-blown
-flowers, while those which he has placed on the head of the
-musical Amateur very much resemble a <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">cheveux-de-frise</span></i> of horns, which
-adorn and fortify the lack-lustre expression and mild resignation of the
-face beneath.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Night Scene is inferior to the rest of the series. The attitude
-of the Husband, who is just killed, is one in which it would be impossible
-for him to stand or even to fall. It resembles the loose
-pasteboard figures they make for children. The characters in the
-last picture, in which the Wife dies, are all masterly. We would
-particularly refer to the captious, petulant self-sufficiency of the
-Apothecary, whose face and figure are constructed on exact physiognomical
-principles, and to the fine example of passive obedience and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>non-resistance in the Servant, whom he is taking to task, and whose
-coat of green and yellow livery is as long and melancholy as his face.
-The disconsolate look, the haggard eyes, the open mouth, the comb
-sticking in the hair, the broken, gapped teeth, which, as it were, hitch
-in an answer—every thing about him denotes the utmost perplexity
-and dismay. The harmony and gradations of colour in this picture
-are uniformly preserved with the greatest nicety, and are well worthy
-the attention of the artist.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>No. 9.</span>]&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; THE SUBJECT CONTINUED&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; [<span class='sc'>June 19, 1814.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>It has been observed, that Hogarth’s pictures are exceedingly unlike
-any other representations of the same kind of subjects—that they
-form a class, and have a character, peculiar to themselves. It may
-be worth while to consider in what this general distinction consists.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the first place, they are, in the strictest sense, <em>Historical</em> pictures;
-and if what Fielding says be true, that his novel of <cite>Tom Jones</cite> ought
-to be regarded as an epic prose-poem, because it contained a regular
-developement of fable, manners, character, and passion, the compositions
-of Hogarth will, in like manner, be found to have a higher
-claim to the title of Epic Pictures than many which have of late
-arrogated that denomination to themselves. When we say that
-Hogarth treated his subjects historically, we mean that his works
-represent the manners and humours of mankind in action, and their
-characters by varied expression. Every thing in his pictures has life
-and motion in it. Not only does the business of the scene never
-stand still, but every feature and muscle is put into full play; the
-exact feeling of the moment is brought out, and carried to its utmost
-height, and then instantly seized and stamped on the canvass for ever.
-The expression is always taken <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">en passant</span></i>, in a state of progress or
-change, and, as it were, at the salient point. Besides the excellence
-of each individual face, the reflection of the expression from face to
-face, the contrast and struggle of particular motives and feelings in
-the different actors in the scene, as of anger, contempt, laughter,
-compassion, are conveyed in the happiest and most lively manner.
-His figures are not like the back-ground on which they are painted:
-even the pictures on the wall have a peculiar look of their own.
-Again, with the rapidity, variety, and scope of history, Hogarth’s
-heads have all the reality and correctness of portraits. He gives the
-extremes of character and expression, but he gives them with perfect
-truth and accuracy. This is, in fact, what distinguishes his compositions
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>from all others of the same kind, that they are equally
-remote from caricature, and from mere still life. It of course happens
-in subjects from common life, that the painter can procure real models,
-and he can get them to sit as long as he pleases. Hence, in general,
-those attitudes and expressions have been chosen which could be
-assumed the longest; and in imitating which, the artist, by taking
-pains and time, might produce almost as complete fac-similes as he
-could of a flower or a flower-pot, of a damask curtain, or a china
-vase. The copy was as perfect and as uninteresting in the one case
-as in the other. On the contrary, subjects of drollery and ridicule
-affording frequent examples of strange deformity and peculiarity of
-features, these have been eagerly seized by another class of artists,
-who, without subjecting themselves to the laborious drudgery of the
-Dutch School and their imitators, have produced our popular caricatures,
-by rudely copying or exaggerating the casual irregularities
-of the human countenance. Hogarth has equally avoided the faults
-of both these styles, the insipid tameness of the one, and the gross
-vulgarity of the other, so as to give to the productions of his pencil
-equal solidity and effect. For his faces go to the very verge of
-caricature, and yet never (we believe in any single instance) go
-beyond it: they take the very widest latitude, and yet we always
-see the links which bind them to nature: they bear all the marks
-and carry all the conviction of reality with them, as if we had seen
-the actual faces for the first time, from the precision, consistency, and
-good sense, with which the whole and every part is made out. They
-exhibit the most uncommon features with the most uncommon expressions,
-but which are yet as familiar and intelligible as possible,
-because with all the boldness they have all the truth of nature.
-Hogarth has left behind him as many of these memorable faces,
-in their memorable moments, as perhaps most of us remember in
-the course of our lives, and has thus doubled the quantity of our
-observation.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>We have, in a former paper, attempted to point out the fund of
-observation, physical and moral, contained in one set of these pictures,
-the <cite>Marriage a-la-Mode</cite>. The rest would furnish as many topics
-to descant upon, were the patience of the reader as inexhaustible as
-the painter’s invention. But as this is not the case, we shall content
-ourselves with barely referring to some of those figures in the other
-pictures, which appear the most striking, and which we see not only
-while we are looking at them, but which we have before us at all
-other times. For instance, who having seen can easily forget that
-exquisite frost-piece of religion and morality, the antiquated Prude
-in the Morning Scene; or that striking commentary on the <em>good old
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>times</em>, the little wretched appendage of a Foot-boy, who crawls half
-famished and half frozen behind her? The French Man and Woman
-in the Noon are the perfection of flighty affectation and studied
-grimace; the amiable <em>fraternisation</em> of the two old Women saluting
-each other is not enough to be admired; and in the little Master, in
-the same national group, we see the early promise and personification
-of that eternal principle of wondrous self-complacency, proof against
-all circumstances, and which makes the French the only people
-who are vain even of being cuckolded and being conquered! Or
-shall we prefer to this the outrageous distress and unmitigated terrors
-of the Boy, who has dropped his dish of meat, and who seems red
-all over with shame and vexation, and bursting with the noise he
-makes? Or what can be better than the good housewifery of the
-Girl underneath, who is devouring the lucky fragments, or than the
-plump, ripe, florid, luscious look of the Servant-wench, embraced by
-a greasy rascal of an Othello, with her pye-dish tottering like her
-virtue, and with the most precious part of its contents running over?
-Just—no, not quite—as good is the joke of the Woman over-head,
-who, having quarrelled with her husband, is throwing their Sunday’s
-dinner out of the window, to complete this chapter of accidents of
-baked-dishes. The Husband in the Evening Scene is certainly as meek
-as any recorded in history; but we cannot say that we admire this
-picture, or the Night Scene after it. But then, in the Taste in High
-Life, there is that inimitable pair, differing only in sex, congratulating
-and delighting one another by ‘all the mutually reflected charities’
-of folly and affectation, with the young Lady coloured like a rose,
-dandling her little, black, pug-faced, white-teethed, chuckling favourite,
-and with the portrait of Mons. Des Noyers in the back-ground,
-dancing in a grand ballet, surrounded by butterflies. And again, in
-the Election Dinner, is the immortal Cobler, surrounded by his
-Peers, who, ‘frequent and full,’—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘In <em>loud</em> recess and <em>brawling</em> conclave sit’:—</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>the Jew in the second picture, a very Jew in grain—innumerable fine
-sketches of heads in the Polling for Votes, of which the Nobleman
-overlooking the caricaturist is the best; and then the irresistible
-tumultuous display of broad humour in the Chairing the Member,
-which is, perhaps, of all Hogarth’s pictures, the most full of laughable
-incidents and situations—the yellow, rusty-faced thresher, with
-his swinging flail, breaking the head of one of the Chairmen, and his
-redoubted antagonist, the Sailor, with his oak-stick, and stumping
-wooden leg, a supplemental cudgel—the persevering ecstasy of the
-hobbling Blind Fiddler, who, in the fray, appears to have been trod
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>upon by the artificial excrescence of the honest Tar—Monsieur, the
-Monkey, with piteous aspect, speculating the impending disaster of
-the triumphant candidate, and his brother Bruin, appropriating the
-paunch—the precipitous flight of the Pigs, souse over head into the
-water, the fine Lady fainting, with vermilion lips, and the two Chimney-sweepers,
-satirical young rogues! We had almost forgot the
-Politician who is burning a hole through his hat with a candle in
-reading the newspaper; and the Chickens, in the <cite>March to Finchley</cite>,
-wandering in search of their lost dam, who is found in the pocket
-of the Serjeant. Of the pictures in the <cite>Rake’s Progress</cite> in this
-collection, we shall not here say any thing, because we think them,
-on the whole, inferior to the prints, and because they have already
-been criticised by a writer, to whom we could add nothing, in a
-paper which ought to be read by every lover of Hogarth and of
-English genius.<a id='r35' /><a href='#f35' class='c012'><sup>[35]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>W. H.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>No. 10.</span>]&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; ON MILTON’S LYCIDAS&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; [<span class='sc'>Aug. 6, 1815.</span></h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘At last he rose, and twitch’d his mantle blue:</div>
- <div class='line'>To-morrow to fresh woods, and pastures new.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Of all Milton’s smaller poems, <em>Lycidas</em> is the greatest favourite
-with us. We cannot agree to the charge which Dr. Johnson has
-brought against it, of pedantry and want of feeling. It is the fine
-emanation of classical sentiment in a youthful scholar—‘most musical,
-most melancholy.’ A certain tender gloom overspreads it, a wayward
-abstraction, a forgetfulness of his subject in the serious reflections
-that arise out of it. The gusts of passion come and go like the
-sounds of music borne on the wind. The loss of the friend whose
-death he laments seems to have recalled, with double force, the reality
-of those speculations which they had indulged together; we are
-transported to classic ground, and a mysterious strain steals responsive
-on the ear while we listen to the poet,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘With eager thought warbling his Doric lay.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>We shall proceed to give a few passages at length in support of our
-opinion. The first we shall quote is as remarkable for the truth and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>sweetness of the natural descriptions as for the characteristic elegance
-of the allusions:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Together both, ere the high lawns appear’d</div>
- <div class='line'>Under the opening eye-lids of the morn,</div>
- <div class='line'>We drove a-field; and both together heard</div>
- <div class='line'>What time the gray-fly winds her sultry horn,</div>
- <div class='line'>Battening our flocks with the fresh dews of night,</div>
- <div class='line'>Oft till the star that rose at evening bright</div>
- <div class='line'>Towards Heaven’s descent had sloped his westering wheel.</div>
- <div class='line'>Meanwhile the rural ditties were not mute,</div>
- <div class='line'>Temper’d to the oaten flute:</div>
- <div class='line'>Rough satyrs danced, and fauns with cloven heel</div>
- <div class='line'>From the glad sound would not be absent long,</div>
- <div class='line'>And old Dametas loved to hear our song.</div>
- <div class='line'>But oh the heavy change, now thou art gone,</div>
- <div class='line'>Now thou art gone, and never must return!</div>
- <div class='line'>Thee, shepherd, thee the woods and desert caves</div>
- <div class='line'>With wild thyme and the gadding vine o’ergrown,</div>
- <div class='line'>And all their echoes mourn.</div>
- <div class='line'>The willows and the hazel copses green</div>
- <div class='line'>Shall now no more be seen</div>
- <div class='line'>Fanning their joyous leaves to thy soft lays.</div>
- <div class='line'>As killing as the canker to the rose,</div>
- <div class='line'>Or taint-worm to the weanling herds that graze,</div>
- <div class='line'>Or frost to flowers that their gay wardrobe wear,</div>
- <div class='line'>When first the white-thorn blows;</div>
- <div class='line'>Such, Lycidas, thy loss to shepherd’s ear!’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>After the fine apostrophe on Fame which Phœbus is invoked to
-utter, the poet proceeds:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Oh fountain Arethuse, and thou honour’d flood,</div>
- <div class='line'>Smooth-sliding Mincius, crown’d with vocal reeds,</div>
- <div class='line'>That strain I heard was of a higher mood;</div>
- <div class='line'>But now my oat proceeds,</div>
- <div class='line'>And listens to the herald of the sea</div>
- <div class='line'>That came in Neptune’s plea.</div>
- <div class='line'>He ask’d the waves, and ask’d the felon winds,</div>
- <div class='line'>What hard mishap hath doom’d this gentle swain?</div>
- <div class='line'>And question’d every gust of rugged winds</div>
- <div class='line'>That blows from off each beaked promontory.</div>
- <div class='line'>They knew not of his story:</div>
- <div class='line'>And sage Hippotades their answer brings,</div>
- <div class='line'>That not a blast was from his dungeon stray’d,</div>
- <div class='line'>The air was calm, and on the level brine</div>
- <div class='line'>Sleek Panope with all her sisters play’d.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>If this is art, it is perfect art; nor do we wish for anything better.
-The measure of the verse, the very sound of the names, would almost
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>produce the effect here described. To ask the poet not to make
-use of such allusions as these, is to ask the painter not to dip in
-the colours of the rainbow, if he could. In fact, it is the common
-cant of criticism to consider every allusion to the classics, and particularly
-in a mind like Milton’s, as pedantry and affectation. Habit is
-a second nature; and, in this sense, the pedantry (if it is to be called
-so) of the scholastic enthusiast, who is constantly referring to images
-of which his mind is full, is as graceful as it is natural. It is not
-affectation in him to recur to ideas and modes of expression, with
-which he has the strongest associations, and in which he takes the
-greatest delight. Milton was as conversant with the world of genius
-before him as with the world of nature about him; the fables of the
-ancient mythology were as familiar to him as his dreams. To be a
-pedant, is to see neither the beauties of nature nor of art. Milton
-saw both; and he made use of the one only to adorn and give new
-interest to the other. He was a passionate admirer of nature; and,
-in a single couplet of his, describing the moon,—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Like one that had been led astray</div>
- <div class='line'>Through the heaven’s wide pathless way,’—</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>there is more intense observation, and intense feeling of nature (as if
-he had gazed himself blind in looking at her), than in twenty volumes
-of descriptive poetry. But he added to his own observation of
-nature the splendid fictions of ancient genius, enshrined her in the
-mysteries of ancient religion, and celebrated her with the pomp of
-ancient names.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Next Camus, reverend sire, went footing slow,</div>
- <div class='line'>His mantle hairy and his bonnet sedge,</div>
- <div class='line'>Inwrought with figures dim, and on the edge</div>
- <div class='line'>Like to that sanguine flower inscrib’d with woe.</div>
- <div class='line'>Oh! who hath reft (quoth he) my dearest pledge?</div>
- <div class='line'>Last came, and last did go,</div>
- <div class='line'>The pilot of the Galilean lake.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>There is a wonderful correspondence in the rhythm of these lines to
-the idea which they convey. This passage, which alludes to the
-clerical character of <em>Lycidas</em>, has been found fault with, as combining
-the truths of the Christian religion with the fictions of the heathen
-mythology. We conceive there is very little foundation for this
-objection, either in reason or good taste. We will not go so far as
-to defend Camoens, who, in his <cite>Lusiad</cite>, makes Jupiter send Mercury
-with a dream to propagate the Catholic religion; nor do we know
-that it is generally proper to introduce the two things in the same
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>poem, though we see no objection to it here; but of this we are
-quite sure, that there is no inconsistency or natural repugnance
-between this poetical and religious faith in the same mind. To the
-understanding, the belief of the one is incompatible with that of the
-other; but in the imagination, they not only may, but do constantly
-co-exist. We will venture to go farther, and maintain, that every
-classical scholar, however orthodox a Christian he may be, is an
-honest Heathen at heart. This requires explanation. Whoever,
-then, attaches a reality to any idea beyond the mere name, has, to a
-certain extent, (though not an abstract), an habitual and practical belief
-in it. Now, to any one familiar with the names of the personages of the
-Heathen mythology, they convey a positive identity beyond the mere
-name. We refer them to something out of ourselves. It is only by
-an effort of abstraction that we divest ourselves of the idea of their
-reality; all our involuntary prejudices are on their side. This is
-enough for the poet. They impose on the imagination by all the
-attractions of beauty and grandeur. They come down to us in
-sculpture and in song. We have the same associations with them, as
-if they had really been; for the belief of the fiction in ancient times
-has produced all the same effects as the reality could have done. It
-was a reality to the minds of the ancient Greeks and Romans, and
-through them it is reflected to us. And, as we shape towers, and men,
-and armed steeds, out of the broken clouds that glitter in the distant
-horizon, so, throned above the ruins of the ancient world, Jupiter
-still nods sublime on the top of blue Olympus, Hercules leans upon
-his club, Apollo has not laid aside his bow, nor Neptune his trident; the
-sea-gods ride upon the sounding waves, the long procession of heroes
-and demi-gods passes in endless review before us, and still we hear</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in8'>——‘The Muses in a ring</div>
- <div class='line'>Aye round about Jove’s altar sing:</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Have sight of Proteus coming from the sea,</div>
- <div class='line'>And hear old Triton blow his wreathed horn.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>If all these mighty fictions had really existed, they could have done
-no more for us! We shall only give one other passage from <em>Lycidas</em>;
-but we flatter ourselves that it will be a treat to our readers, if they
-are not already familiar with it. It is the passage which contains that
-exquisite description of the flowers:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Return, Alpheus; the dread voice is past</div>
- <div class='line'>That shrunk thy streams; return, Sicilian Muse,</div>
- <div class='line'>And call the vales, and bid them hither cast</div>
- <div class='line'>Their bells, and flow’rets of a thousand hues.</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>Ye valleys low, where the mild whispers use</div>
- <div class='line'>Of shades and wanton winds and gushing brooks,</div>
- <div class='line'>On whose fresh lap the swart star sparely looks,</div>
- <div class='line'>Throw hither all your quaint enamell’d eyes,</div>
- <div class='line'>That on the green turf suck the honied showers,</div>
- <div class='line'>And purple all the ground with vernal flowers;</div>
- <div class='line'>Bring the rathe primrose that forsaken dies,</div>
- <div class='line'>The tufted crow-toe, and pale jessamine,</div>
- <div class='line'>The white pink, and the pansy freak’d with jet,</div>
- <div class='line'>The glowing violet,</div>
- <div class='line'>The musk-rose, and the well-attired woodbine,</div>
- <div class='line'>With cowslips wan, that hang the pensive head,</div>
- <div class='line'>And every flower that sad embroidery wears;</div>
- <div class='line'>Bid amaranthus all his beauty shed,</div>
- <div class='line'>And daffadillies fill their cups with tears,</div>
- <div class='line'>To strew the laureat hearse where Lycid lies.</div>
- <div class='line'>For so to interpose a little ease</div>
- <div class='line'>Let our frail thoughts dally with false surmise.</div>
- <div class='line'>Ay me! Whilst thee the shores and sounding seas</div>
- <div class='line'>Waft far away, where’er thy bones are hurl’d,</div>
- <div class='line'>Whether beyond the stormy Hebrides,</div>
- <div class='line'>Where thou perhaps under the whelming tide</div>
- <div class='line'>Visit’st the bottom of the monstrous world,</div>
- <div class='line'>Or whether thou, to our moist vows denied,</div>
- <div class='line'>Sleep’st by the fable of Bellerus old,</div>
- <div class='line'>Where the great vision of the guarded mount</div>
- <div class='line'>Looks towards Namancos and Bayona’s hold,</div>
- <div class='line'>Look homeward, Angel, now, and melt with ruth,</div>
- <div class='line'>And, O ye Dolphins, waft the hapless youth.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Dr. Johnson is very much offended at the introduction of these
-Dolphins; and indeed, if he had had to guide them through the waves,
-he would have made much the same figure as his old friend Dr.
-Burney does, swimming in the <em>Thames</em> with his wig on, with the
-water-nymphs, in the picture by Barry at the Adelphi.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There is a description of flowers in the <cite>Winter’s Tale</cite>, which we
-shall give as a parallel to Milton’s. We shall leave it to the reader
-to decide which is the finest; for we dare not give the preference.
-<em>Perdita</em> says,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in14'>——‘Here’s flowers for you,</div>
- <div class='line'>Hot lavender, mints, savoury, marjoram,</div>
- <div class='line'>The marygold, that goes to bed with the sun,</div>
- <div class='line'>And with him rises weeping; these are flowers</div>
- <div class='line'>Of middle summer, and I think, they’re given</div>
- <div class='line'>To men of middle age. Y’are welcome.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Camillo.</em> I should leave grazing, were I of your flock,</div>
- <div class='line'>And only live by gazing.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>‘<em>Perdita.</em> Out, alas!</div>
- <div class='line'>You’d be so lean, that blasts of January</div>
- <div class='line'>Would blow you through and through. Now, my fairest friend,</div>
- <div class='line'>I would I had some flowers o’ th’ spring, that might</div>
- <div class='line'>Become your time of day: O Proserpina,</div>
- <div class='line'>For the flowers now, that, frighted, you let fall</div>
- <div class='line'>From Dis’s waggon! Daffodils,</div>
- <div class='line'>That come before the swallow dares, and take</div>
- <div class='line'>The winds of March with beauty; violets dim,</div>
- <div class='line'>But sweeter than the lids of Juno’s eyes,</div>
- <div class='line'>Or Cytherea’s breath; pale primroses,</div>
- <div class='line'>That die unmarried, ere they can behold</div>
- <div class='line'>Bright Phœbus in his strength, a malady</div>
- <div class='line'>Most incident to maids; bold oxlips, and</div>
- <div class='line'>The crown imperial; lilies of all kinds,</div>
- <div class='line'>The flower de lis being one. O, these I lack</div>
- <div class='line'>To make you garlands of, and my sweet friend,</div>
- <div class='line'>To strew him o’er and o’er.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Dr. Johnson’s general remark, that Milton’s genius had not room
-to show itself in his smaller pieces, is not well-founded. Not to
-mention <em>Lycidas</em>, the <em>Allegro</em>, and <em>Penseroso</em>, it proceeds on a false
-estimate of the merits of his great work, which is not more distinguished
-by strength and sublimity than by tenderness and beauty. The last
-were as essential qualities of Milton’s mind as the first. The battle
-of the angels, which has been commonly considered as the best part
-of the <cite>Paradise Lost</cite>, is the worst.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>W. H.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>No. 11.</span>]&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; ON MILTON’S VERSIFICATION&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; [<span class='sc'>Aug. 20, 1815.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>Milton’s works are a perpetual invocation to the Muses; a hymn to
-Fame. His religious zeal infused its character into his imagination;
-and he devotes himself with the same sense of duty to the cultivation
-of his genius, as he did to the exercise of virtue, or the good of his
-country. He does not write from casual impulse, but after a severe
-examination of his own strength, and with a determination to leave
-nothing undone which it is in his power to do. He always labours,
-and he almost always succeeds. He strives to say the finest things
-in the world, and he does say them. He adorns and dignifies his
-subject to the utmost. He surrounds it with all the possible associations
-of beauty or grandeur, whether moral, or physical, or intellectual.
-He refines on his descriptions of beauty, till the sense almost aches
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>at them, and raises his images of terror to a gigantic elevation, that
-‘makes Ossa like a wart.’ He has a high standard, with which
-he is constantly comparing himself, and nothing short of which can
-satisfy him:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in10'>——‘Sad task, yet argument</div>
- <div class='line'>Not less but more heroic than the wrath</div>
- <div class='line'>Of stern Achilles on his foe pursued,</div>
- <div class='line'>If answerable stile I can obtain.</div>
- <div class='line'>——Unless an age too late, or cold</div>
- <div class='line'>Climate, or years, damp my intended wing.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Milton has borrowed more than any other writer; yet he is
-perfectly distinct from every other writer. The power of his mind is
-stamped on every line. He is a writer of centos, and yet in originality
-only inferior to Homer. The quantity of art shews the strength of
-his genius; so much art would have overloaded any other writer.
-Milton’s learning has all the effect of intuition. He describes objects
-of which he had only read in books, with the vividness of actual
-observation. His imagination has the force of nature. He makes
-words tell as pictures:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Him followed Rimmon, whose delightful seat</div>
- <div class='line'>Was fair Damascus, on the fertile banks</div>
- <div class='line'>Of Abbana and Pharphar, <em>lucid</em> streams.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>And again:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘As when a vulture on Imaus bred,</div>
- <div class='line'>Whose snowy ridge the roving Tartar bounds,</div>
- <div class='line'>Dislodging from a region scarce of prey</div>
- <div class='line'>To gorge the flesh of lambs or yearling kids</div>
- <div class='line'>On hills where flocks are fed, <em>flies towards the springs</em></div>
- <div class='line'><em>Of Ganges or Hydaspes, Indian streams;</em></div>
- <div class='line'><em>But in his way lights on the barren plains</em></div>
- <div class='line'><em>Of Sericana, where Chineses drive</em></div>
- <div class='line'><em>With sails and wind their cany waggons light</em>.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Such passages may be considered as demonstrations of history.
-Instances might be multiplied without end. There is also a decided
-tone in his descriptions, an eloquent dogmatism, as if the poet
-spoke from thorough conviction, which Milton probably derived from
-his spirit of partisanship, or else his spirit of partisanship from the
-natural firmness and vehemence of his mind. In this Milton resembles
-Dante, (the only one of the moderns with whom he has anything in
-common), and it is remarkable that Dante, as well as Milton, was a
-political partisan. That approximation to the severity of impassioned
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>prose which has been made an objection to Milton’s poetry, is one of
-its chief excellencies. It has been suggested, that the vividness with
-which he describes visible objects, might be owing to their having
-acquired a greater strength in his mind after the privation of sight;
-but we find the same palpableness and solidity in the descriptions
-which occur in his early poems. There is, indeed, the same depth
-of impression in his descriptions of the objects of the other senses.
-Milton had as much of what is meant by <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">gusto</span></i> as any poet. He
-forms the most intense conceptions of things, and then embodies them
-by a single stroke of his pen. Force of style is perhaps his first
-excellence. Hence he stimulates us most in the reading, and less
-afterwards.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It has been said that Milton’s ideas were musical rather than
-picturesque, but this observation is not true, in the sense in which it
-was meant. The ear, indeed, predominates over the eye, because it
-is more immediately affected, and because the language of music
-blends more immediately with, and forms a more natural accompaniment
-to, the variable and indefinite associations of ideas conveyed by
-words. But where the associations of the imagination are not the
-principal thing, the individual object is given by Milton with equal
-force and beauty. The strongest and best proof of this, as a characteristic
-power of his mind, is, that the persons of Adam and Eve, of
-Satan, etc., are always accompanied, in our imagination, with the
-grandeur of the naked figure; they convey to us the ideas of sculpture.
-As an instance, take the following:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in24'>——‘He soon</div>
- <div class='line'>Saw within ken a glorious Angel stand,</div>
- <div class='line'>The same whom John saw also in the sun:</div>
- <div class='line'>His back was turned, but not his brightness hid;</div>
- <div class='line'>Of beaming sunny rays a golden tiar</div>
- <div class='line'>Circled his head, nor less his locks behind</div>
- <div class='line'>Illustrious on his shoulders fledged with wings</div>
- <div class='line'>Lay waving round; on some great charge employ’d</div>
- <div class='line'>He seem’d, or fix’d in cogitation deep.</div>
- <div class='line'>Glad was the spirit impure, as now in hope</div>
- <div class='line'>To find who might direct his wand’ring flight</div>
- <div class='line'>To Paradise, the happy seat of man,</div>
- <div class='line'>His journey’s end, and our beginning woe.</div>
- <div class='line'>But first he casts to change his proper shape,</div>
- <div class='line'>Which else might work him danger or delay:</div>
- <div class='line'>And now a stripling cherub he appears,</div>
- <div class='line'>Not of the prime, yet such as in his face</div>
- <div class='line'>Youth smiled celestial, and to every limb</div>
- <div class='line'>Suitable grace diffus’d, so well he feign’d:</div>
- <div class='line'>Under a coronet his flowing hair</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>In curls on either cheek play’d; wings he wore</div>
- <div class='line'>Of many a colour’d plume sprinkled with gold,</div>
- <div class='line'>His habit fit for speed succinct, and held</div>
- <div class='line'>Before his decent steps a silver wand.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The figures introduced here have all the elegance and precision of
-a Greek statue.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Milton’s blank verse is the only blank verse in the language (except
-Shakspeare’s) which is readable. Dr. Johnson, who had modelled
-his ideas of versification on the regular sing-song of Pope, condemns
-the <cite>Paradise Lost</cite> as harsh and unequal. We shall not pretend to
-say that this is not sometimes the case; for where a degree of
-excellence beyond the mechanical rules of art is attempted the poet
-must sometimes fail. But we imagine that there are more perfect
-examples in Milton of musical expression, or of an adaptation of the
-sound and movement of the verse to the meaning of the passage, than
-in all our other writers, whether of rhyme or blank verse, put together,
-(with the exception already mentioned). Spenser is the most
-harmonious of our poets, and Dryden is the most sounding and varied
-of our rhymists. But in neither is there anything like the same ear
-for music, the same power of approximating the varieties of poetical
-to those of musical rhythm, as there is in our great epic poet. The
-sound of his lines is moulded into the expression of the sentiment,
-almost of the very image. They rise or fall, pause or hurry rapidly
-on, with exquisite art, but without the least trick or affectation, as the
-occasion seems to require.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The following are some of the finest instances:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in16'>——‘His hand was known</div>
- <div class='line'>In Heaven by many a tower’d structure high;</div>
- <div class='line'>Nor was his name unheard or unador’d</div>
- <div class='line'>In ancient Greece: and in the Ausonian land</div>
- <div class='line'>Men called him Mulciber: and how he fell</div>
- <div class='line'>From Heav’n, they fabled, thrown by angry Jove</div>
- <div class='line'>Sheer o’er the crystal battlements; from morn</div>
- <div class='line'>To noon he fell, from noon to dewy eve,</div>
- <div class='line'>A summer’s day; and with the setting sun</div>
- <div class='line'>Dropt from the zenith like a falling star</div>
- <div class='line'>On Lemnos, the Ægean isle: this they relate,</div>
- <div class='line'>Erring.’</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in8'>——‘But chief the spacious hall</div>
- <div class='line'>Thick swarm’d, both on the ground and in the air,</div>
- <div class='line'>Brush’d with the hiss of rustling wings. As bees</div>
- <div class='line'>In spring time, when the sun with Taurus rides,</div>
- <div class='line'>Pour forth their populous youth about the hive</div>
- <div class='line'>In clusters; they among fresh dews and flow’rs</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>Fly to and fro: or on the smoothed plank,</div>
- <div class='line'>The suburb of their straw-built citadel,</div>
- <div class='line'>New rubb’d with balm, expatiate and confer</div>
- <div class='line'>Their state affairs. So thick the airy crowd</div>
- <div class='line'>Swarm’d and were straiten’d; till the signal giv’n,</div>
- <div class='line'>Behold a wonder! They but now who seem’d</div>
- <div class='line'>In bigness to surpass earth’s giant sons,</div>
- <div class='line'>Now less than smallest dwarfs, in narrow room</div>
- <div class='line'>Throng numberless, like that Pygmean race</div>
- <div class='line'>Beyond the Indian mount, or fairy elves,</div>
- <div class='line'>Whose midnight revels by a forest side</div>
- <div class='line'>Or fountain, some belated peasant sees,</div>
- <div class='line'>Or dreams he sees, while over-head the moon</div>
- <div class='line'>Sits arbitress, and nearer to the earth</div>
- <div class='line'>Wheels her pale course: they on their mirth and dance</div>
- <div class='line'>Intent, with jocund music charm his ear;</div>
- <div class='line'>At once with joy and fear his heart rebounds.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>We can only give another instance; though we have some difficulty
-in leaving off. ‘What a pity,’ said an ingenious person of our
-acquaintance, ‘that Milton had not the pleasure of reading <cite>Paradise
-Lost</cite>!’—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Round he surveys (and well might, where he stood</div>
- <div class='line'>So high above the circling canopy</div>
- <div class='line'>Of night’s extended shade) from eastern point</div>
- <div class='line'>Of Libra to the fleecy star that bears</div>
- <div class='line'>Andromeda far off Atlantic seas</div>
- <div class='line'>Beyond th’ horizon: then from pole to pole</div>
- <div class='line'>He views in breadth, and without longer pause</div>
- <div class='line'>Down right into the world’s first region throws</div>
- <div class='line'>His flight precipitant, and winds with ease</div>
- <div class='line'>Through the pure marble air his oblique way</div>
- <div class='line'>Amongst innumerable stars that shone</div>
- <div class='line'>Stars distant, but nigh hand seem’d other worlds;</div>
- <div class='line'>Or other worlds they seem’d or happy isles,’ etc.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The verse, in this exquisitely modulated passage, floats up and
-down as if it had itself wings. Milton has himself given us the theory
-of his versification.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘In many a winding bout</div>
- <div class='line'>Of linked sweetness long drawn out.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Dr. Johnson and Pope would have converted his vaulting Pegasus
-into a rocking-horse. Read any other blank verse but Milton’s,—Thomson’s,
-Young’s, Cowper’s, Wordsworth’s,—and it will be found,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>from the want of the same insight into ‘the hidden soul of harmony,’
-to be mere lumbering prose.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>W. H.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c013'>
- <div><em>To the President of The Round Table.</em></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'><span class='sc'>Sir</span>,—It is somewhat remarkable, that in <cite>Pope’s Essay on Criticism</cite> (not a very
-long poem) there are no less than half a score couplets rhyming to the word <em>sense</em>.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘But of the two, less dangerous is the offence,</div>
- <div class='line'>To tire our patience than mislead our sense.’—<em>lines</em> 3, 4.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘In search of wit these lose their common sense,</div>
- <div class='line'>And then turn critics in their own defence.’—<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">l.</span></i> 28, 29.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Pride, where wit fails, steps in to our defence,</div>
- <div class='line'>And fills up all the mighty void of sense.’—<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">l.</span></i> 209, 10.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Some by old words to fame have made pretence,</div>
- <div class='line'>Ancients in phrase, mere moderns in their sense.’—<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">l.</span></i> 324, 5.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘’Tis not enough no harshness gives offence;</div>
- <div class='line'>The sound must seem an echo to the sense.’—<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">l.</span></i> 364, 5.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘At every trifle scorn to take offence;</div>
- <div class='line'>That always shews great pride or little sense.’—<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">l.</span></i> 386, 7.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Be silent always, when you doubt your sense,</div>
- <div class='line'>And speak, though sure, with seeming diffidence.’—<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">l.</span></i> 566, 7.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Be niggards of advice on no pretence,</div>
- <div class='line'>For the worst avarice is that of sense.’—<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">l.</span></i> 578, 9.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Strain out the last dull dropping of their sense,</div>
- <div class='line'>And rhyme with all the rage of impotence.’—<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">l.</span></i> 608, 9.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Horace still charms with graceful negligence,</div>
- <div class='line'>And without method talks us into sense.’—<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">l.</span></i> 653, 4.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>I am, Sir, your humble servant,</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in26'><span class='sc'>A Small Critic</span>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>No. 12.</span>]&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; ON MANNER&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; [<span class='sc'>Aug. 27, 1815.</span> [<span class='sc'>Sep. 3, 1815.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>It was the opinion of Lord Chesterfield, that <em>manner</em> is of more
-importance than <em>matter</em>. This opinion seems at least to be warranted
-by the practice of the world; nor do we think it so entirely without
-foundation as some persons of more solid than showy pretensions
-would make us believe. In the remarks which we are going to
-make, we can scarcely hope to have any party very warmly on our
-side; for the most superficial coxcomb would be thought to owe his
-success to sterling merit.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>What any person says or does is one thing; the mode in which
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>he says or does it is another. The last of these is what we understand
-by <em>manner</em>. In other words, manner is the involuntary or
-incidental expression given to our thoughts and sentiments by looks,
-tones, and gestures. Now, we are inclined in many cases to prefer
-this latter mode of judging of what passes in the mind to more
-positive and formal proof, were it for no other reason than that it is
-involuntary. ‘Look,’ says Lord Chesterfield, ‘in the face of the
-person to whom you are speaking, if you wish to know his real
-sentiments; for he can command his words more easily than his
-countenance.’ We may perform certain actions from design, or repeat
-certain professions by rote: the manner of doing either will in general
-be the best test of our sincerity. The mode of conferring a favour
-is often thought of more value than the favour itself. The actual
-obligation may spring from a variety of questionable motives, vanity,
-affectation, or interest: the cordiality with which the person from
-whom you have received it asks you how you do, or shakes you by
-the hand, does not admit of misinterpretation. The manner of doing
-any thing, is that which marks the degree and force of our internal
-impressions; it emanates most directly from our immediate or habitual
-feelings; it is that which stamps its life and character on any action;
-the rest may be performed by an automaton. What is it that makes
-the difference between the best and the worst actor, but the manner
-of going through the same part? The one has a perfect idea of the
-degree and force with which certain feelings operate in nature, and
-the other has no idea at all of the workings of passion. There would
-be no difference between the worst actor in the world and the best,
-placed in real circumstances, and under the influence of real passion.
-A writer may express the thoughts he has borrowed from another,
-but not with the same force, unless he enters into the true spirit of
-them. Otherwise he will resemble a person reading what he does
-not understand, whom you immediately detect by his wrong emphasis.
-His illustrations will be literally exact, but misplaced and awkward;
-he will not gradually warm with his subject, nor feel the force of
-what he says, nor produce the same effect on his readers. An
-author’s style is not less a criterion of his understanding than his
-sentiments. The same story told by two different persons shall, from
-the difference of the manner, either set the table in a roar, or not
-relax a feature in the whole company. We sometimes complain
-(perhaps rather unfairly) that particular persons possess more vivacity
-than wit. But we ought to take into the account, that their very
-vivacity arises from their enjoying the joke; and their humouring a
-story by drollery of gesture or archness of look, shews only that they
-are acquainted with the different ways in which the sense of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>ludicrous expresses itself. It is not the mere dry jest, but the relish
-which the person himself has of it, with which we sympathise. For
-in all that tends to pleasure and excitement, the capacity for enjoyment
-is the principal point. One of the most pleasant and least
-tiresome persons of our acquaintance is a humourist, who has three
-or four quaint witticisms and proverbial phrases, which he always
-repeats over and over; but he does this with just the same vivacity
-and freshness as ever, so that you feel the same amusement with less
-effort than if he had startled his hearers with a succession of original
-conceits. Another friend of ours, who never fails to give vent to
-one or two real <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">jeu-d’esprits</span></i> every time you meet him, from the pain
-with which he is delivered of them, and the uneasiness he seems to
-suffer all the rest of the time, makes a much more interesting than
-comfortable companion. If you see a person in pain for himself, it
-naturally puts you in pain for him. The art of pleasing consists in
-being pleased. To be amiable is to be satisfied with one’s self and
-others. Good-humour is essential to pleasantry. It is this circumstance,
-among others, that renders the wit of Rabelais so much more
-delightful than that of Swift, who, with all his satire, is ‘as dry as
-the remainder biscuit after a voyage.’ In society, good-temper and
-animal spirits are nearly everything. They are of more importance
-than sallies of wit, or refinements of understanding. They give a
-general tone of cheerfulness and satisfaction to the company. The
-French have the advantage over us in external manners. They
-breathe a lighter air, and have a brisker circulation of the blood.
-They receive and communicate their impressions more freely.
-The interchange of ideas costs them less. Their constitutional
-gaiety is a kind of natural intoxication, which does not require
-any other stimulus. The English are not so well off in this
-respect; and <em>Falstaff’s</em> commendation on sack was evidently intended
-for his countrymen,—whose ‘learning is often a mere hoard of
-gold kept by a devil, till wine commences it, and sets it in act
-and use.’<a id='r36' /><a href='#f36' class='c012'><sup>[36]</sup></a> More undertakings fail for want of spirit than for
-want of sense. Confidence gives a fool the advantage over a wise
-man. In general, a strong passion for any object will ensure
-success, for the desire of the end will point out the means. We
-apprehend that people usually complain, without reason, of not succeeding
-in various pursuits according to their deserts. Such persons, we
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>will grant, may have great merit in all other respects; but in that in
-which they fail, it will almost invariably hold true, that they do not
-deserve to succeed. For instance, a person who has spent his life
-in thinking will acquire a habit of reflection; but he will neither
-become a dancer nor a singer, rich nor beautiful. In like manner,
-if any one complains of not succeeding in affairs of gallantry, we will
-venture to say, it is because he is not gallant. He has mistaken his
-talent—that’s all. If any person of exquisite sensibility makes love
-awkwardly, it is because he does not feel it as he should. One of
-these disappointed sentimentalists may very probably feel it upon
-reflection, may brood over it till he has worked himself up to a pitch
-of frenzy, and write his mistress the finest love-letters in the world,
-in her absence; but, be assured, he does not feel an atom of this
-passion in her presence. If, in paying her a compliment, he frowns
-with more than usual severity, or, in presenting her with a bunch of
-flowers, seems as if he was going to turn his back upon her, he can
-only expect to be laughed at for his pains; nor can he plead an
-excess of feeling as an excuse for want of common sense. She may
-say, ‘It is not with me you are in love, but with the ridiculous
-chimeras of your own brain. You are thinking of <em>Sophia Western</em>,
-or some other heroine, and not of me. Go and make love to your
-romances.’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Lord Chesterfield’s character of the Duke of Marlborough is a
-good illustration of his general theory. He says, ‘Of all the men
-I ever knew in my life, (and I knew him extremely well), the late
-Duke of Marlborough possessed the graces in the highest degree,
-not to say engrossed them; for I will venture (contrary to the
-custom of profound historians, who always assign deep causes for
-great events) to ascribe the better half of the Duke of Marlborough’s
-greatness and riches to those graces. He was eminently illiterate;
-wrote bad English, and spelt it worse. He had no share of what
-is commonly called parts; that is, no brightness, nothing shining in
-his genius. He had most undoubtedly an excellent good plain
-understanding with sound judgment. But these alone would probably
-have raised him but something higher than they found him,
-which was page to King James <span class='fss'>II.</span>‘s Queen. There the Graces
-protected and promoted him; for while he was Ensign of the Guards,
-the Duchess of Cleveland, then favourite mistress of Charles <span class='fss'>II.</span>,
-struck by these very graces, gave him £5000, with which he immediately
-bought an annuity of £500 a year, which was the foundation
-of his subsequent fortune. His figure was beautiful, but his manner
-was irresistible by either man or woman. It was by this engaging,
-graceful manner, that he was enabled, during all his wars, to connect
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>the various and jarring powers of the grand alliance, and to carry
-them on to the main object of the war, notwithstanding their private
-and separate views, jealousies, and wrongheadedness. Whatever
-court he went to (and he was often obliged to go himself to some
-resty and refractory ones), he as constantly prevailed, and brought
-them into his measures.’<a id='r37' /><a href='#f37' class='c012'><sup>[37]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Grace in women has more effect than beauty. We sometimes
-see a certain fine self-possession, an habitual voluptuousness of character,
-which reposes on its own sensations, and derives pleasure from
-all around it, that is more irresistible than any other attraction.
-There is an air of languid enjoyment in such persons, ‘in their eyes,
-in their arms, and their hands, and their faces,’ which robs us of ourselves,
-and draws us by a secret sympathy towards them. Their
-minds are a shrine where pleasure reposes. Their smile diffuses a
-sensation like the breath of spring. Petrarch’s description of Laura
-answers exactly to this character, which is indeed the Italian character.
-Titian’s portraits are full of it: they seem sustained by
-sentiment, or as if the persons whom he painted sat to music. There
-is one in the Louvre (or there was) which had the most of this
-expression we ever remember. It did not look downward; ‘it
-looked forward, beyond this world.’ It was a look that never passed
-away, but remained unalterable as the deep sentiment which gave
-birth to it. It is the same constitutional character (together with
-infinite activity of mind) which has enabled the greatest man in
-modern history to bear his reverses of fortune with gay magnanimity,
-and to submit to the loss of the empire of the world with as little
-discomposure as if he had been playing a game at chess.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Grace has been defined as the outward expression of the inward
-harmony of the soul. Foreigners have more of this than the English,—particularly
-the people of the southern and eastern countries.
-Their motions appear (like the expression of their countenances) to
-have a more immediate communication with their feelings. The
-inhabitants of the northern climates, compared with these children
-of the sun, are like hard inanimate machines, with difficulty set in
-motion. A strolling gipsy will offer to tell your fortune with a grace
-and an insinuation of address that would be admired in a court.<a id='r38' /><a href='#f38' class='c012'><sup>[38]</sup></a> The
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>Hindoos that we see about the streets are another example of this.
-They are a different race of people from ourselves. They wander
-about in a luxurious dream. They are like part of a glittering procession,—like
-revellers in some gay carnival. Their life is a dance,
-a measure; they hardly seem to tread the earth, but are borne along
-in some more genial element, and bask in the radiance of brighter
-suns. We may understand this difference of climate by recollecting
-the difference of our own sensations at different times, in the fine
-glow of summer, or when we are pinched and dried up by a northeast
-wind. Even the foolish Chinese, who go about twirling their
-fans and their windmills, shew the same delight in them as the children
-they collect around them. The people of the East make it
-their business to sit and think and do nothing. They indulge in
-endless reverie; for the incapacity of enjoyment does not impose on
-them the necessity of action. There is a striking example of this
-passion for castle-building in the story of the glass-man in the Arabian
-Nights.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>After all, we would not be understood to say that manner is every
-thing. Nor would we put Euclid or Sir Isaac Newton on a level
-with the first <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">petit-maître</span></i> we might happen to meet. We consider
-<cite>Æsop’s Fables</cite> to have been a greater work of genius than Fontaine’s
-translation of them; though we doubt whether we should not prefer
-Fontaine, for his style only, to Gay, who has shewn a great deal of
-original invention. The elegant manners of people of fashion have
-been objected to us to shew the frivolity of external accomplishments,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>and the facility with which they are acquired. As to the last point,
-we demur. There is no class of people who lead so laborious a life,
-or who take more pains to cultivate their minds as well as persons,
-than people of fashion. A young lady of quality, who has to devote
-so many hours a day to music, so many to dancing, so many to
-drawing, so many to French, Italian, etc., certainly does not pass her
-time in idleness; and these accomplishments are afterwards called into
-action by every kind of external or mental stimulus, by the excitements
-of pleasure, vanity, and interest. A Ministerial or Opposition lord goes
-through more drudgery than half a dozen literary hacks; nor does a
-reviewer by profession read half the same number of productions as a
-modern fine lady is obliged to labour through. We confess, however,
-we are not competent judges of the degree of elegance or refinement
-implied in the general tone of fashionable manners. The successful
-experiment made by <em>Peregrine Pickle</em>, in introducing his strolling
-mistress into genteel company, does not redound greatly to their
-credit. In point of elegance of external appearance, we see no
-difference between women of fashion and women of a different character,
-who dress in the same style.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>T. T.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>No. 13.</span>]&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; ON THE TENDENCY OF SECTS&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; [<span class='sc'>Sep. 10, 1815.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>There is a natural tendency in sects to narrow the mind.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The extreme stress laid upon differences of minor importance, to
-the neglect of more general truths and broader views of things, gives
-an inverted bias to the understanding; and this bias is continually
-increased by the eagerness of controversy, and captious hostility to
-the prevailing system. A party-feeling of this kind once formed will
-insensibly communicate itself to other topics; and will be too apt to
-lead its votaries to a contempt for the opinions of others, a jealousy of
-every difference of sentiment, and a disposition to arrogate all sound
-principle as well as understanding to themselves, and those who think
-with them. We can readily conceive how such persons, from fixing
-too high a value on the practical pledge which they have given of the
-independence and sincerity of their opinions, come at last to entertain a
-suspicion of every one else as acting under the shackles of prejudice
-or the mask of hypocrisy. All those who have not given in their
-unqualified protest against received doctrines and established authority,
-are supposed to labour under an acknowledged incapacity to form a
-rational determination on any subject whatever. Any argument, not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>having the presumption of singularity in its favour, is immediately set
-aside as nugatory. There is, however, no prejudice so strong as that
-which arises from a fancied exemption from all prejudice. For this
-last implies not only the practical conviction that it is right, but the
-theoretical assumption that it cannot be wrong. From considering all
-objections as in this manner ‘null and void,’ the mind becomes so
-thoroughly satisfied with its own conclusions, as to render any further
-examination of them superfluous, and confounds its exclusive pretensions
-to reason with the absolute possession of it. Those who, from
-their professing to submit everything to the test of reason, have
-acquired the name of rational Dissenters, have their weak sides as
-well as other people: nor do we know of any class of disputants more
-disposed to take their opinions for granted, than those who call themselves
-Freethinkers. A long habit of objecting to every thing establishes
-a monopoly in the right of contradiction; a prescriptive title to
-the privilege of starting doubts and difficulties in the common belief,
-without being liable to have our own called in question. There cannot
-be a more infallible way to prove that we must be in the right,
-than by maintaining roundly that every one else is in the wrong!
-Not only the opposition of sects to one another, but their unanimity
-among themselves, strengthens their confidence in their peculiar
-notions. They feel themselves invulnerable behind the double fence
-of sympathy with themselves, and antipathy to the rest of the world.
-Backed by the zealous support of their followers, they become equally
-intolerant with respect to the opinions of others, and tenacious of their
-own. They fortify themselves within the narrow circle of their
-new-fangled prejudices; the whole exercise of their right of private
-judgment is after a time reduced to the repetition of a set of watchwords,
-which have been adopted as the Shiboleth of the party; and
-their extremest points of faith pass as current as the beadroll and
-legends of the Catholics, or St. Athanasius’s Creed, and the Thirty-nine
-Articles. We certainly are not going to recommend the establishment
-of articles of faith, or implicit assent to them, as favourable
-to the progress of philosophy; but neither has the spirit of opposition
-to them this tendency, as far as relates to its immediate effects, however
-useful it may be in its remote consequences. The spirit of
-controversy substitutes the irritation of personal feeling for the independent
-exertion of the understanding; and when this irritation ceases,
-the mind flags for want of a sufficient stimulus to urge it on. It discharges
-all its energy with its spleen. Besides, this perpetual cavilling
-with the opinions of others, detecting petty flaws in their arguments,
-calling them to a literal account for their absurdities, and squaring
-their doctrines by a pragmatical standard of our own, is necessarily
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>adverse to any great enlargement of mind, or original freedom of
-thought.<a id='r39' /><a href='#f39' class='c012'><sup>[39]</sup></a> The constant attention bestowed on a few contested points,
-by at once flattering our pride, our prejudices, and our indolence,
-supersedes more general inquiries; and the bigoted controversialist,
-by dint of repeating a certain formula of belief, shall not only convince
-himself that all those who differ from him are undoubtedly
-wrong on that point, but that their knowledge on all others
-must be comparatively slight and superficial. We have known
-some very worthy and well-informed biblical critics, who, by
-virtue of having discovered that one was not three, or that the same
-body could not be in two places at once, would be disposed to treat
-the whole Council of Trent, with Father Paul at their head, with
-very little deference, and to consider Leo <span class='fss'>X.</span> with all his court, as no
-better than drivellers. Such persons will hint to you, as an additional
-proof of his genius, that Milton was a non-conformist, and will
-excuse the faults of Paradise Lost, as Dr. Johnson magnified them,
-because the author was a republican. By the all-sufficiency of their
-merits in believing certain truths which have been ‘hid from ages,’
-they are elevated, in their own imagination, to a higher sphere of
-intellect, and are released from the necessity of pursuing the more
-ordinary tracks of inquiry. Their faculties are imprisoned in a few
-favourite dogmas, and they cannot break through the trammels of a
-sect. Hence we may remark a hardness and setness in the ideas of
-those who have been brought up in this way, an aversion to those
-finer and more delicate operations of the intellect, of taste and genius,
-which require greater flexibility and variety of thought, and do not
-afford the same opportunity for dogmatical assertion and controversial
-cabal. The distaste of the Puritans, Quakers, etc. to pictures,
-music, poetry, and the fine arts in general, may be traced to this
-source as much as to their affected disdain of them, as not sufficiently
-spiritual and remote from the gross impurity of sense.<a id='r40' /><a href='#f40' class='c012'><sup>[40]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>We learn from the interest we take in things, and according to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>the number of things in which we take an interest. Our ignorance
-of the real value of different objects and pursuits, will in general keep
-pace with our contempt for them. To set out with denying common
-sense to every one else, is not the way to be wise ourselves; nor shall
-we be likely to learn much, if we suppose that no one can teach us
-any thing worth knowing. Again, a contempt for the habits and
-manners of the world is as prejudicial as a contempt for their opinions.
-A puritanical abhorrence of every thing that does not fall in with our
-immediate prejudices and customs, must effectually cut us off, not only
-from a knowledge of the world and of human nature, but of good
-and evil, of vice and virtue; at least, if we can credit the assertion
-of Plato, (which, to some degree, we do), that the knowledge of
-every thing implies the knowledge of its opposite. ‘There is some
-soul of goodness in things evil.’ A most respectable sect among
-ourselves (we mean the Quakers) have carried this system of negative
-qualities nearly to perfection. They labour diligently, and with great
-success, to exclude all ideas from their minds which they might have
-in common with others. On the principle that evil communications
-corrupt good manners, they retain a virgin purity of understanding,
-and laudable ignorance of all liberal arts and sciences; they take
-every precaution, and keep up a perpetual quarantine against the
-infection of other people’s vices—or virtues; they pass through the
-world like figures cut out of pasteboard or wood, turning neither to
-the right nor the left; and their minds are no more affected by the
-example of the follies, the pursuits, the pleasures, or the passions of
-mankind, than the clothes which they wear. Their ideas want
-<em>airing</em>; they are the worse for not being used: for fear of soiling
-them, they keep them folded up and laid by in a sort of mental
-clothes-press, through the whole of their lives. They take their
-notions on trust from one generation to another, (like the scanty cut
-of their coats), and are so wrapped up in these traditional maxims,
-and so pin their faith on them, that one of the most intelligent of
-this class of people, not long ago, assured us that ‘war was a thing
-that was going quite out of fashion’! This abstract sort of existence
-may have its advantages, but it takes away all the ordinary sources
-of a moral imagination, as well as strength of intellect. Interest is
-the only link that connects them with the world. We can understand
-the high enthusiasm and religious devotion of monks and
-anchorites, who gave up the world and its pleasures to dedicate
-themselves to a sublime contemplation of a future state. But the sect
-of the Quakers, who have transplanted the maxims of the desert into
-manufacturing towns and populous cities, who have converted the
-solitary cells of the religious orders into counting-houses, their beads
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>into ledgers, and keep a regular debtor and creditor account
-between this world and the next, puzzle us mightily! The Dissenter
-is not vain, but conceited: that is, he makes up by his own
-good opinion for the want of the cordial admiration of others. But
-this often stands their self-love in so good stead that they need not
-envy their dignified opponents who repose on lawn sleeves and ermine.
-The unmerited obloquy and dislike to which they are exposed has
-made them cold and reserved in their intercourse with society. The
-same cause will account for the dryness and general homeliness of
-their style. They labour under a sense of the want of public sympathy.
-They pursue truth, for its own sake, into its private recesses
-and obscure corners. They have to dig their way along a narrow
-under-ground passage. It is not their object to shine; they have
-none of the usual incentives of vanity, light, airy, and ostentatious.
-Archiepiscopal Sees and mitres do not glitter in their distant horizon.
-They are not wafted on the wings of fancy, fanned by the breath of
-popular applause. The voice of the world, the tide of opinion, is
-not with them. They do not therefore aim at <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">éclat</span></i>, at outward
-pomp and shew. They have a plain ground to work upon, and they
-do not attempt to embellish it with idle ornaments. It would be in
-vain to strew the flowers of poetry round the borders of the Unitarian
-controversy.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There is one quality common to all sectaries, and that is, a principle
-of strong fidelity. They are the safest partisans, and the steadiest
-friends. Indeed, they are almost the only people who have any idea
-of an abstract attachment either to a cause or to individuals, from a
-sense of duty, independently of prosperous or adverse circumstances,
-and in spite of opposition.<a id='r41' /><a href='#f41' class='c012'><sup>[41]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Z.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>No. 14.</span>]&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; ON JOHN BUNCLE&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; [<span class='sc'>Sept. 17, 1815.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c011'><em>John Buncle</em> is the English <em>Rabelais</em>. This is an author with whom,
-perhaps, many of our readers are not acquainted, and whom we therefore
-wish to introduce to their notice. As most of our countrymen
-delight in English Generals and in English Admirals, in English
-Courtiers and in English Kings, so our great delight is in English
-authors.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>The soul of Francis Rabelais passed into John Amory, the author
-of <cite>The Life and Adventures of John Buncle</cite>. Both were physicians,
-and enemies of too much gravity. Their great business was to enjoy
-life. Rabelais indulges his spirit of sensuality in wine, in dried neats’
-tongues, in Bologna sausages, in botargos. John Buncle shews the
-same symptoms of inordinate satisfaction in tea and bread and butter.
-While Rabelais roared with Friar John and the Monks, John Buncle
-gossiped with the ladies; and with equal and uncontrolled gaiety.
-These two authors possessed all the insolence of health, so that their
-works give a fillip to the constitution; but they carried off the
-exuberance of their natural spirits in different ways. The title of one
-of Rabelais’ chapters (and the contents answer to the title) is—‘How
-they chirped over their cups.’ The title of a corresponding chapter
-in John Buncle would run thus: ‘The author is invited to spend the
-evening with the divine Miss Hawkins, and goes accordingly, with the
-delightful conversation that ensued.’ Natural philosophers are said to
-extract sun-beams from ice: our author has performed the same feat upon
-the cold, quaint subtleties of theology. His constitutional alacrity overcomes
-every obstacle. He converts the thorns and briars of controversial
-divinity into a bed of roses. He leads the most refined and
-virtuous of their sex through the mazes of inextricable problems with
-the air of a man walking a minuet in a drawing-room; mixes up in
-the most natural and careless manner the academy of compliments
-with the rudiments of algebra; or passes with rapturous indifference
-from the First of St. John and a disquisition on the Logos, to the no
-less metaphysical doctrines of the principle of self-preservation, or the
-continuation of the species. <em>John Buncle</em> is certainly one of the
-most singular productions in the language; and herein lies its peculiarity.
-It is a Unitarian romance; and one in which the soul and body are
-equally attended to. The hero is a great philosopher, mathematician,
-anatomist, chemist, philologist, and divine, with a good appetite, the
-best spirits, and an amorous constitution, who sets out on a series of
-strange adventures to propagate his philosophy, his divinity, and his
-species, and meets with a constant succession of accomplished females,
-adorned with equal beauty, wit, and virtue, who are always ready to
-discuss all kinds of theoretical and practical points with him. His
-angels (and all his women are angels) have all taken their degrees in
-more than one science: love is natural to them. He is sure to
-find</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘A mistress and a saint in every grove.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Pleasure and business, wisdom and mirth, take their turns with the most
-agreeable regularity. <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">A jocis ad seria, in seriis vicissim ad jocos transire.</span></i>
-After a chapter of calculations in fluxions, or on the descent of tongues,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>the lady and gentleman fall from Platonics to hoydening, in a manner
-as truly edifying as anything in the scenes of Vanbrugh or Sir George
-Etherege. No writer ever understood so well the art of relief. The
-effect is like travelling in Scotland, and coming all of a sudden to
-a spot of habitable ground. His mode of making love is admirable.
-He takes it quite easily, and never thinks of a refusal. His success
-gives him confidence, and his confidence gives him success. For
-example: in the midst of one of his rambles in the mountains of
-Cumberland, he unexpectedly comes to an elegant country-seat, where,
-walking on the lawn with a book in her hand, he sees a most enchanting
-creature, the owner of the mansion: our hero is on fire,
-leaps the ha-ha which separates them, presents himself before the lady
-with an easy but respectful air, begs to know the subject of her
-meditation, they enter into conversation, mutual explanations take
-place, a declaration of love is made, and the wedding-day is fixed
-for the following Tuesday. Our author now leads a life of perfect
-happiness with his beautiful Miss Noel, in a charming solitude, for a
-few weeks; till, on his return from one of his rambles in the mountains,
-he finds her a corpse. He ‘<em>sits with his eyes shut for seven
-days</em>,’ absorbed in silent grief; he then bids adieu to melancholy
-reflections, not being one of that sect of philosophers who think that
-‘man was made to mourn,’—takes horse and sets out for the nearest
-watering-place. As he alights at the first inn on the road, a lady
-dressed in a rich green riding-habit steps out of a coach, John
-Buncle hands her into the inn, they drink tea together, they converse,
-they find an exact harmony of sentiment, a declaration of love follows
-as a matter of course, and that day week they are married. Death,
-however, contrives to keep up the ball for him; he marries seven
-wives in succession, and buries them all. In short, John Buncle’s
-gravity sat upon him with the happiest indifference possible. He
-danced the hays with religion and morality with the ease of
-a man of fashion and of pleasure. He was determined to see fair-play
-between grace and nature, between his immortal and his mortal
-part, and in case of any difficulty, upon the principle of ‘first come,
-first served,’ made sure of the present hour. We sometimes suspect
-him of a little hypocrisy, but upon a closer inspection, it appears to be
-only an affectation of hypocrisy. His fine constitution comes to his
-relief, and floats him over the shoals and quicksands that lie in his
-way, ‘most dolphin-like.’ You see him from mere happiness of
-nature chuckling with inward satisfaction in the midst of his periodical
-penances, his grave grimaces, his death’s-heads, and <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">memento moris</span></i>.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in16'>——‘And there the antic sits</div>
- <div class='line'>Mocking his state, and grinning at his pomp.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>As men make use of olives to give a relish to their wine, so John
-Buncle made use of philosophy to give a relish to life. He stops in a
-ball-room at Harrowgate to moralise on the small number of faces that
-appeared there out of those he remembered some years before: all
-were gone whom he saw at a still more distant period; but this casts
-no damper on his spirits, and he only dances the longer and better for
-it. He suffers nothing unpleasant to remain long upon his mind.
-He gives, in one place, a miserable description of two emaciated
-valetudinarians whom he met at an inn, supping a little mutton-broth
-with difficulty, but he immediately contrasts himself with them in
-fine relief. ‘While I beheld things with astonishment, the servant,’
-he says, ‘brought in dinner—a pound of rump-steaks and a quart of
-green peas, two cuts of bread, a tankard of strong beer, and a pint
-of port-wine; <em>with a fine appetite, I soon despatched my mess, and
-over my wine, to help digestion, began to sing the following lines</em>!’
-The astonishment of the two strangers was now as great as his own
-had been.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>We wish to enable our readers to judge for themselves of the style
-of our whimsical moralist, but are at a loss what to chuse—whether
-his account of his man O’Fin; or of his friend Tom Fleming; or of
-his being chased over the mountains by robbers, ‘whisking before them
-like the wind away,’ as if it were high sport; or his address to the
-Sun, which is an admirable piece of serious eloquence; or his character
-of six Irish gentlemen, Mr. Gollogher, Mr. Gallaspy, Mr. Dunkley,
-Mr. Makins, Mr. Monaghan, and Mr. O’Keefe, the last ‘descended
-from the Irish kings, and first cousin to the great O’Keefe, who was
-buried not long ago in Westminster Abbey.’ He professes to give
-an account of these Irish gentlemen, ‘for the honour of Ireland, and
-as they were curiosities of the human kind.’ Curiosities, indeed, but
-not so great as their historian!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>‘Mr. Makins was the only one of the set who was not tall and
-handsome. He was a very low, thin man, not four feet high,
-and had but one eye, with which he squinted most shockingly. But
-as he was matchless on the fiddle, sung well, and chatted agreeably,
-he was a favourite with the ladies. They preferred ugly Makins
-(as he was called) to many very handsome men. He was a
-Unitarian.’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>‘Mr. Monaghan was an honest and charming fellow. This gentleman
-and Mr. Dunkley married ladies they fell in love with at
-Harrowgate Wells; Dunkley had the fair Alcmena, Miss Cox of
-Northumberland; and Monaghan, Antiope with haughty charms,
-Miss Pearson of Cumberland. They lived very happy many years,
-and their children, I hear, are settled in Ireland.’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>Gentle reader, here is the character of Mr. Gallaspy:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>‘Gallaspy was the tallest and strongest man I have ever seen, well
-made, and very handsome: had wit and abilities, sung well, and
-talked with great sweetness and fluency, but was so extremely wicked
-that it were better for him if he had been a natural fool. By his vast
-strength and activity, his riches and eloquence, few things could withstand
-him. He was the most profane swearer I have known: fought
-every thing, whored every thing, and drank seven in hand: that is,
-seven glasses so placed between the fingers of his right hand, that, in
-drinking, the liquor fell into the next glasses, and thereby he drank
-out of the first glass seven glasses at once. This was a common
-thing, I find from a book in my possession, in the reign of Charles <span class='fss'>II.</span>,
-in the madness that followed the restoration of that profligate and
-worthless prince.<a id='r42' /><a href='#f42' class='c012'><sup>[42]</sup></a> But this gentleman was the only man I ever saw
-who could or would attempt to do it; and he made but one gulp of
-whatever he drank. He did not swallow a fluid like other people,
-but if it was a quart, poured it in as from pitcher to pitcher. When
-he smoked tobacco, he always blew two pipes at once, one at each
-corner of his mouth, and threw the smoke out at both his nostrils. He
-had killed two men in duels before I left Ireland, and would have
-been hanged, but that it was his good fortune to be tried before a
-judge who never let any man suffer for killing another in this manner.
-(This was the late Sir John St. Leger.) He debauched all the
-women he could, and many whom he could not corrupt....’ The
-rest of this passage would, we fear, be too rich for the Round
-Table, as we cannot insert it, in the manner of Mr. Buncle, in a
-sandwich of theology. Suffice it to say, that the candour is greater
-than the candour of Voltaire’s <cite>Candide</cite>, and the modesty equal to
-Colley Cibber’s.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To his friend Mr. Gollogher, he consecrates the following irresistible
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">petit souvenir</span></i>:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>‘He might, if he had pleased, have married any one of the most
-illustrious and richest women in the kingdom; but he had an aversion
-to matrimony, and could not bear the thoughts of a wife. Love and
-a bottle were his taste: he was, however, the most honourable of
-men in his amours, and never abandoned any woman in distress, as too
-many men of fortune do, when they have gratified desire. All the
-distressed were ever sharers in Mr. Gollogher’s fine estate, and
-especially the girls he had taken to his breast. He provided happily
-for them all, and left nineteen daughters he had by several women, a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>thousand pounds each. This was acting with a temper worthy of a
-man; <em>and to the memory of the benevolent Tom Gollogher, I devote this
-memorandum</em>.’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Lest our readers should form rather a coarse idea of our author
-from the foregoing passages, we will conclude with another list of
-friends in a different style:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>‘The Conniving-house (as the gentlemen of Trinity called it in
-my time, and long after) was a little public-house, kept by Jack
-Macklean, about a quarter of a mile beyond Rings-end, on the top
-of the beach, within a few yards of the sea. Here we used to have
-the finest fish at all times; and, in the season, green peas, and all the
-most excellent vegetables. The ale here was always extraordinary,
-and everything the best; which, with its delightful situation, rendered
-it a delightful place of a summer’s evening. Many a delightful evening
-have I passed in this pretty thatched house with the famous Larry
-Grogan, who played on the bagpipes extremely well; dear Jack
-Lattin, matchless on the fiddle, and the most agreeable of companions;
-that ever-charming young fellow, Jack Wall, the most worthy, the
-most ingenious, the most engaging of men, the son of Counsellor
-Maurice Wall; and many other delightful fellows, who went in the
-days of their youth to the shades of eternity. When I think of them
-and their evening songs—‘<em>We will go to Johnny Macklean’s, to try if
-his ale be good or no</em>,’ etc. and that years and infirmities begin to
-oppress me—What is life!’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>We have another English author, very different from the last
-mentioned one, but equal in <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">naïveté</span></i>, and in the perfect display of
-personal character; we mean Isaac Walton, who wrote the <cite>Complete
-Angler</cite>. That well-known work has an extreme simplicity, and an
-extreme interest, arising out of its very simplicity. In the description
-of a fishing tackle you perceive the piety and humanity of the author’s
-mind. This is the best pastoral in the language, not excepting Pope’s
-or Philips’s. We doubt whether Sannazarius’s <cite>Piscatory Eclogues</cite> are
-equal to the scenes described by Walton on the banks of the River
-Lea. He gives the feeling of the open air. We walk with him
-along the dusty roadside, or repose on the banks of the river under a
-shady tree, and in watching for the finny prey, imbibe what he
-beautifully calls ‘the patience and simplicity of poor, honest fishermen.’
-We accompany them to their inn at night, and partake of their simple
-but delicious fare, while Maud, the pretty milkmaid, at her mother’s
-desire, sings the classical ditties of Sir Walter Raleigh. Good cheer
-is not neglected in this work, any more than in <em>John Buncle</em>, or any
-other history which sets a proper value on the good things of life.
-The prints in the <cite>Complete Angler</cite> give an additional reality and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>interest to the scenes it describes. While Tottenham Cross shall
-stand, and longer, thy work, amiable and happy old man, shall last!<a id='r43' /><a href='#f43' class='c012'><sup>[43]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>W. H.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>No. 15.</span>]&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; ON THE CAUSES OF METHODISM&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; [<span class='sc'>Oct. 22, 1815.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>The first Methodist on record was David. He was the first eminent
-person we read of, who made a regular compromise between religion
-and morality, between faith and good works. After any trifling
-peccadillo in point of conduct, as a murder, adultery, perjury, or the
-like, he ascended with his harp into some high tower of his palace;
-and having chaunted, in a solemn strain of poetical inspiration, the
-praises of piety and virtue, made his peace with heaven and his own
-conscience. This extraordinary genius, in the midst of his personal
-errors, retained the same lofty abstract enthusiasm for the favourite
-objects of his contemplation; the character of the poet and the
-prophet remained unimpaired by the vices of the man—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Pure in the last recesses of the mind’;</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>and the best test of the soundness of his principles and the elevation of
-his sentiments, is, that they were proof against his practice. The
-Gnostics afterwards maintained, that it was no matter what a man’s
-actions were, so that his understanding was not debauched by them—so
-that his opinions continued uncontaminated, and <em>his heart</em>, as the
-phrase is, <em>right towards God</em>. Strictly speaking, this sect (whatever
-name it might go by) is as old as human nature itself; for it has
-existed ever since there was a contradiction between the passions
-and the understanding—between what we are, and what we desire
-to be. The principle of Methodism is nearly allied to hypocrisy,
-and almost unavoidably slides into it: yet it is not the same thing;
-for we can hardly call any one a hypocrite, however much at variance
-his professions and his actions, who really wishes to be what he would
-be thought.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Jewish bard, whom we have placed at the head of this class
-of devotees, was of a sanguine and robust temperament. Whether
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>he chose ‘to sinner it or saint it,’ he did both most royally, with a
-fulness of gusto, and carried off his penances and his <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">faux-pas</span></i> in a
-style of oriental grandeur. This is by no means the character of his
-followers among ourselves, who are a most pitiful set. They may
-rather be considered as a collection of religious invalids; as the refuse
-of all that is weak and unsound in body and mind. To speak of
-them as they deserve, they are not well in the flesh, and therefore
-they take refuge in the spirit; they are not comfortable here, and
-they seek for the life to come; they are deficient in steadiness of
-moral principle, and they trust to grace to make up the deficiency;
-they are dull and gross in apprehension, and therefore they are glad
-to substitute faith for reason, and to plunge in the dark, under the
-supposed sanction of superior wisdom, into every species of mystery
-and jargon. This is the history of Methodism, which may be defined
-to be religion with its slobbering-bib and go-cart. It is a bastard
-kind of Popery, stripped of its painted pomp and outward ornaments,
-and reduced to a state of pauperism. ‘The whole need not a physician.’
-Popery owed its success to its constant appeal to the senses
-and to the weaknesses of mankind. The Church of England deprives
-the Methodists of the pride and pomp of the Romish Church; but
-it has left open to them the appeal to the indolence, the ignorance,
-and the vices of the people; and the secret of the success of the
-Catholic faith and evangelical preaching is the same—both are a
-religion by proxy. What the one did by auricular confession, absolution,
-penance, pictures, and crucifixes, the other does, even more
-compendiously, by grace, election, faith without works, and words
-without meaning.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the first place, the same reason makes a man a religious enthusiast
-that makes a man an enthusiast in any other way, an uncomfortable
-mind in an uncomfortable body. Poets, authors, and artists
-in general, have been ridiculed for a pining, puritanical, poverty-struck
-appearance, which has been attributed to their real poverty. But it
-would perhaps be nearer the truth to say, that their being poets,
-artists, etc. has been owing to their original poverty of spirit and
-weakness of constitution. As a general rule, those who are dissatisfied
-with themselves, will seek to go out of themselves into an ideal world.
-Persons in strong health and spirits, who take plenty of air and
-exercise, who are ‘in favour with their stars,’ and have a thorough
-relish of the good things of this life, seldom devote themselves in
-despair to religion or the Muses. Sedentary, nervous, hypochondriacal
-people, on the contrary, are forced, for want of an appetite
-for the real and substantial, to look out for a more airy food and
-speculative comforts. ‘Conceit in weakest bodies strongest works.’
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>A journeyman sign-painter, whose lungs have imbibed too great a
-quantity of the effluvia of white-lead, will be seized with a fantastic
-passion for the stage; and <em>Mawworm</em>, tired of standing behind his
-counter, was eager to mount a tub, mistaking the suppression of his
-animal spirits for the communication of the Holy Ghost!<a id='r44' /><a href='#f44' class='c012'><sup>[44]</sup></a> If you
-live near a chapel or tabernacle in London, you may almost always
-tell, from physiognomical signs, which of the passengers will turn
-the corner to go there. We were once staying in a remote place
-in the country, where a chapel of this sort had been erected by the
-force of missionary zeal; and one morning, we perceived a long procession
-of people coming from the next town to the consecration of
-this same chapel. Never was there such a set of scarecrows.
-Melancholy tailors, consumptive hair-dressers, squinting cobblers,
-women with child or in the ague, made up the forlorn hope of the
-pious cavalcade. The pastor of this half-starved flock, we confess,
-came riding after, with a more goodly aspect, as if he had ‘with
-sound of bell been knolled to church, and sat at good men’s feasts.’
-He had in truth lately married a thriving widow, and been pampered
-with hot suppers to strengthen the flesh and the spirit. We have
-seen several of these ‘round fat oily men of God,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“That shone all glittering with ungodly dew.”’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>They grow sleek and corpulent by getting into better pasture, but
-they do not appear healthy. They retain the original sin of their
-constitution, an atrabilious taint in their complexion, and do not put
-a right-down, hearty, honest, good-looking face upon the matter, like
-the regular clergy.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Again, Methodism, by its leading doctrines, has a peculiar charm
-for all those, who have an equal facility in sinning and repenting,—in
-whom the spirit is willing but the flesh is weak,—who have neither
-fortitude to withstand temptation, nor to silence the admonitions of
-conscience,—who like the theory of religion better than the practice,
-and who are willing to indulge in all the raptures of speculative devotion,
-without being tied down to the dull, literal performance of its
-duties. There is a general propensity in the human mind (even in
-the most vicious) to pay virtue a distant homage; and this desire
-is only checked by the fear of condemning ourselves by our own
-acknowledgments. What an admirable expedient then in ‘that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>burning and shining light,’ Whitefield, and his associates, to make this
-very disposition to admire and extol the highest patterns of goodness,
-a substitute for, instead of an obligation to, the practice of virtue, to
-allow us to be quit for ‘the vice that most easily besets us,’ by canting
-lamentations over the depravity of human nature, and loud hosannahs
-to the Son of David! How comfortably this doctrine must sit on
-all those who are loth to give up old habits of vice, or are just tasting
-the sweets of new ones; on the withered hag who looks back on
-a life of dissipation, or the young devotee who looks forward to a
-life of pleasure; the knavish tradesman retiring from business or
-entering on it; the battered rake; the sneaking politician, who trims
-between his place and his conscience, wriggling between heaven and
-earth, a miserable two-legged creature, with sanctified face and fawning
-gestures; the maudling sentimentalist, the religious prostitute, the
-disinterested poet-laureate, the humane war-contractor, or the Society
-for the Suppression of Vice! This scheme happily turns morality
-into a sinecure, takes all the practical drudgery and trouble off your
-hands, ‘and sweet religion makes a rhapsody of words.’ Its proselytes
-besiege the gates of heaven, like sturdy beggars about the doors
-of the great, lie and bask in the sunshine of divine grace, sigh and
-groan and bawl out for mercy, expose their sores and blotches to
-excite commiseration, and cover the deformities of their nature with
-a garb of borrowed righteousness!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The jargon and nonsense which are so studiously inculcated in
-the system, are another powerful recommendation of it to the vulgar.
-It does not impose any tax upon the understanding. Its essence is
-to be unintelligible. It is <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">carte blanche</span></i> for ignorance and folly!
-Those, ‘numbers without number,’ who are either unable or unwilling
-to think connectedly or rationally on any subject, are at once
-released from every obligation of the kind, by being told that faith
-and reason are opposed to one another, and the greater the impossibility,
-the greater the merit of the faith. A set of phrases which,
-without conveying any distinct idea, excite our wonder, our fear, our
-curiosity and desires, which let loose the imagination of the gaping
-multitude, and confound and baffle common sense, are the common
-stock-in-trade of the conventicle. They never stop for the distinctions
-of the understanding, and have thus got the start of other sects,
-who are so hemmed in with the necessity of giving reasons for their
-opinions, that they cannot get on at all. ‘Vital Christianity’ is no
-other than an attempt to lower all religion to the level of the capacities
-of the lowest of the people. One of their favourite places of
-worship combines the noise and turbulence of a drunken brawl at an
-ale-house, with the indecencies of a bagnio. They strive to gain a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>vertigo by abandoning their reason, and give themselves up to the
-intoxications of a distempered zeal, that</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Dissolves them into ecstasies,</div>
- <div class='line'>And brings all heaven before their eyes.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Religion, without superstition, will not answer the purposes of
-fanaticism, and we may safely say, that almost every sect of Christianity
-is a perversion of its essence, to accommodate it to the prejudices
-of the world. The Methodists have greased the boots of the Presbyterians,
-and they have done well. While the latter are weighing
-their doubts and scruples to the division of a hair, and shivering on
-the narrow brink that divides philosophy from religion, the former
-plunge without remorse into hell-flames, soar on the wings of divine
-love, are carried away with the motions of the spirit, are lost in the
-abyss of unfathomable mysteries,—election, reprobation, predestination,—and
-revel in a sea of boundless nonsense. It is a gulf that
-swallows up every thing. The cold, the calculating, and the dry, are
-not to the taste of the many; religion is an anticipation of the preternatural
-world, and it in general requires preternatural excitements
-to keep it alive. If it takes a definite consistent form, it loses its
-interest: to produce its effect it must come in the shape of an apparition.
-Our quacks treat grown people as the nurses do children;—terrify
-them with what they have no idea of, or take them to a puppet-show.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>W. H.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>No. 16.</span>]&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; ON THE MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; [<span class='sc'>Nov. 26, 1815.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>Bottom the weaver is a character that has not had justice done him.
-He is the most romantic of mechanics. And what a list of companions
-he has—<em>Quince</em> the carpenter, <em>Snug</em> the joiner, <em>Flute</em> the
-bellows-mender, <em>Snout</em> the tinker, <em>Starveling</em> the tailor; and then,
-again, what a group of fairy attendants, <em>Puck</em>, <em>Peaseblossom</em>, <em>Cobweb</em>,
-<em>Moth</em>, and <em>Mustard-seed</em>! It has been observed that Shakspeare’s
-characters are constructed upon deep physiological principles;
-and there is something in this play which looks very like it. <em>Bottom</em>
-the weaver, who takes the lead of</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘This crew of patches, rude mechanicals,</div>
- <div class='line'>That work for bread upon Athenian stalls,’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>follows a sedentary trade, and he is accordingly represented as conceited,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>serious, and fantastical. He is ready to undertake any thing
-and every thing, as if it was as much a matter of course as the motion
-of his loom and shuttle. He is for playing the tyrant, the lover, the
-lady, the lion. ‘He will roar that it shall do any man’s heart good
-to hear him’; and this being objected to as improper, he still has a
-resource in his good opinion of himself, and ‘will roar you an ‘twere
-any nightingale.’ <em>Snug</em> the joiner is the moral man of the piece, who
-proceeds by measurement and discretion in all things. You see him
-with his rule and compasses in his hand. ‘Have you the lion’s part
-written? Pray you, if it be, give it me, for I am slow of study.’
-‘You may do it extempore,’ says <em>Quince</em>, ‘for it is nothing but
-roaring.’ <em>Starveling</em> the tailor keeps the peace, and objects to the
-lion and the drawn sword: ‘I believe we must leave the killing out,
-when all’s done.’ <em>Starveling</em>, however, does not start the objections
-himself, but seconds them when made by others, as if he had not
-spirit to express his fears without encouragement. It is too much to
-suppose all this intentional: but it very luckily falls out so. Nature
-includes all that is implied in the most subtle and analytical distinctions;
-and the same distinctions will be found in Shakspeare. <em>Bottom</em>,
-who is not only chief actor, but stage-manager for the occasion, has a
-device to obviate the danger of frightening the ladies: ‘Write me a
-prologue, and let the prologue seem to say, we will do him no harm
-with our swords, and that Pyramus is not killed indeed; and for
-better assurance, tell them that I, Pyramus, am not Pyramus, but
-Bottom the weaver; this will put them out of fear.’ <em>Bottom</em> seems
-to have understood the subject of dramatic illusion at least as well
-as any modern essayist. If our holiday mechanic rules the roast
-among his fellows, he is no less at home in his new character of an
-ass, ‘with amiable cheeks and fair large ears.’ He instinctively
-acquires a most learned taste, and grows fastidious in the choice of
-dried peas and bottled hay. He is quite familiar with his new
-attendants, and assigns them their parts with all due gravity. ‘Monsieur
-<em>Cobweb</em>, good Monsieur, get your weapon in your hand, and
-kill me a red-hipt humble bee on the top of a thistle, and good
-Monsieur, bring me the honey-bag.’ What an exact knowledge is
-shewn here of natural history!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><em>Puck</em> or <em>Robin Goodfellow</em> is the leader of the fairy band. He
-is the <em>Ariel</em> of the <cite>Midsummer Night’s Dream</cite>; and yet as unlike as
-can be to the <em>Ariel</em> in the <cite>Tempest</cite>. No other poet could have made
-two such different characters out of the same fanciful materials and
-situations. <em>Ariel</em> is a minister of retribution, who is touched with a
-sense of pity at the woes he inflicts. <em>Puck</em> is a mad-cap sprite, full
-of wantonness and mischief, who laughs at those whom he misleads:
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>‘Lord, what fools these mortals be!’ <em>Ariel</em> cleaves the air, and
-executes his mission with the zeal of a winged messenger: <em>Puck</em> is
-borne along on his fairy errand, like the light and glittering gossamer
-before the breeze. He is, indeed, a most Epicurean little gentleman,
-dealing in quaint devices, and faring in dainty delights. <em>Prospero</em> and
-his world of spirits are a set of moralists: but with <em>Oberon</em> and his
-fairies we are launched at once into the empire of the butterflies.
-How beautifully is this race of beings contrasted with the men and
-women actors in the scene, by a single epithet which <em>Titania</em> gives to
-the latter, ‘the human mortals’! It is astonishing that Shakspeare
-should be considered, not only by foreigners, but by many of our own
-critics, as a gloomy and heavy writer, who painted nothing but
-‘Gorgons and Hydras and Chimeras dire.’ His subtlety exceeds
-that of all other dramatic writers, insomuch that a celebrated person
-of the present day said, that he regarded him rather as a metaphysician
-than a poet. His delicacy and sportive gaiety are infinite. In the
-<cite>Midsummer Night’s Dream</cite> alone, we should imagine, there is more
-sweetness and beauty of description than in the whole range of French
-poetry put together. What we mean is this, that we will produce
-out of that single play ten passages, to which we do not think any ten
-passages in the works of the French poets can be opposed, displaying
-equal fancy and imagery. Shall we mention the remonstrance of
-<em>Helena</em> to <em>Hermia</em>, or <em>Titania’s</em> description of her fairy train, or her
-disputes with <em>Oberon</em> about the Indian boy, or <em>Puck’s</em> account of
-himself and his employments, or the Fairy Queen’s exhortation to the
-elves to pay due attendance upon her favourite <em>Bottom</em>,<a id='r45' /><a href='#f45' class='c012'><sup>[45]</sup></a> or <em>Hippolyta’s</em>
-description of a chace, or <em>Theseus’s</em> answer? The two last are as
-heroical and spirited, as the others are full of luscious tenderness.
-The reading of this play is like wandering in a grove by moonlight:
-the descriptions breathe a sweetness like odours thrown from beds of
-flowers.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>Shakspeare is almost the only poet of whom it may be said, that</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Age cannot wither, nor custom stale</div>
- <div class='line'>His infinite variety.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>His nice touches of individual character, and marking of its different
-gradations, have been often admired; but the instances have not been
-exhausted, because they are inexhaustible. We will mention two
-which occur to us. One is where <em>Christopher Sly</em> expresses his
-approbation of the play, by saying, ‘’Tis a good piece of work, would
-‘twere done,’ as if he were thinking of his Saturday night’s job.
-Again, there cannot well be a finer gradation of character than that
-in Henry <span class='fss'>IV.</span> between <em>Falstaff</em> and <em>Shallow</em>, and <em>Shallow</em> and <em>Silence</em>.
-It seems difficult to fall lower than the Squire; but this fool, great as
-he is, finds an admirer and humble foil in his cousin <em>Silence</em>. Vain of
-his acquaintance with <em>Sir John</em>, who makes a butt of him, he exclaims,
-‘Would, cousin <em>Silence</em>, that thou had’st seen that which this
-Knight and I have seen!’ ‘Aye, master <em>Shallow</em>, we have heard
-the chimes at midnight,’ says <em>Sir John</em>. The true spirit of humanity,
-the thorough knowledge of the stuff we are made of, the practical
-wisdom with the seeming fooleries, in the whole of this exquisite
-scene, and afterwards in the dialogue on the death of old <em>Double</em>,
-have no parallel anywhere else.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It has been suggested to us, that the <cite>Midsummer Night’s Dream</cite> would
-do admirably to get up as a Christmas after-piece; and our prompter
-proposes that Mr. Kean should play the part of <em>Bottom</em>, as worthy of
-his great talents. He might offer to play the lady like any of our
-actresses that he pleased, the lover or the tyrant like any of our actors
-that he pleased, and the lion like ‘the most fearful wild fowl living.’
-The carpenter, the tailor, and joiner, would hit the galleries. The
-young ladies in love would interest the side-boxes, and <em>Robin Goodfellow</em>
-and his companions excite a lively fellow-feeling in the children
-from school. There would be two courts, an empire within an
-empire, the Athenian and the Fairy King and Queen, with their
-attendants, and with all their finery. What an opportunity for processions,
-for the sound of trumpets, and glittering of spears! What
-a fluttering of urchins’ painted wings; what a delightful profusion
-of gauze clouds, and airy spirits floating on them! It would be a
-complete English fairy tale.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>W. H.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>
- <h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>No. 17.</span>]&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; ON THE BEGGAR’S OPERA&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; [<span class='sc'>June 18, 1815.</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>We have begun this Essay on a very coarse sheet of damaged foolscap,
-and we find that we are going to write it, whether for the sake of
-contrast, or from having a very fine pen, in a remarkably nice hand.
-Something of a similar process seems to have taken place in Gay’s
-mind, when he composed his <cite>Beggar’s Opera</cite>. He chose a very
-unpromising ground to work upon, and he has prided himself in
-adorning it with all the graces, the precision and brilliancy of style.
-It is a vulgar error to call this a vulgar play. So far from it, that we
-do not scruple to declare our opinion that it is one of the most refined
-productions in the language. The elegance of the composition is in
-exact proportion to the coarseness of the materials: by ‘happy
-alchemy of mind,’ the author has extracted an essence of refinement
-from the dregs of human life, and turns its very dross into gold. The
-scenes, characters, and incidents are, in themselves, of the lowest and
-most disgusting kind: but, by the sentiments and reflections which
-are put into the mouths of highwaymen, turnkeys, their mistresses,
-wives, or daughters, he has converted this motley group into a set
-of fine gentlemen and ladies, satirists and philosophers. He has also
-effected this transformation without once violating probability, or
-‘o’erstepping the modesty of nature.’ In fact Gay has turned the
-tables on the critics; and by the assumed licence of the mock-heroic
-style, has enabled himself to <em>do justice to nature</em>, that is, to give all
-the force, truth, and locality of real feeling to the thoughts and
-expressions, without being called to the bar of false taste and affected
-delicacy. The extreme beauty and feeling of the song, ‘Woman is
-like the fair flower in its lustre,’ is only equalled by its characteristic
-propriety and <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">naïveté</span></i>. It may be said that this is taken from
-Tibullus; but there is nothing about Covent Garden in Tibullus.
-<em>Polly</em> describes her lover going to the gallows with the same touching
-simplicity, and with all the natural fondness of a young girl in her
-circumstances, who sees in his approaching catastrophe nothing but
-the misfortunes and the personal accomplishments of the object of her
-affections. ‘I see him sweeter than the nosegay in his hand: the
-admiring crowd lament that so lovely a youth should come to an
-untimely end:—even butchers weep, and Jack Ketch refuses his fee
-rather than consent to tie the fatal knot.’ The preservation of the
-character and costume is complete. It has been said by a great
-authority, ‘There is some soul of goodness in things evil’: and the
-<cite>Beggar’s Opera</cite> is a good-natured but instructive comment on this text.
-The poet has thrown all the gaiety and sunshine of the imagination,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>all the intoxication of pleasure, and the vanity of despair, round the
-short-lived existence of his heroes; while <em>Peachum</em> and <em>Lockitt</em> are
-seen in the back-ground, parcelling out their months and weeks between
-them. The general view exhibited of human life, is of the most
-masterly and abstracted kind. The author has, with great felicity,
-brought out the good qualities and interesting emotions almost inseparable
-from the lowest conditions; and with the same penetrating glance
-has detected the disguises which rank and circumstances lend to
-exalted vice. Every line in this sterling comedy sparkles with wit,
-and is fraught with the keenest sarcasm. The very wit, however,
-takes off from the offensiveness of the satire; and we have seen great
-statesmen, very great statesmen, heartily enjoying the joke, laughing
-most immoderately at the compliments paid to them as not much
-worse than pickpockets and cut-throats in a different line of life, and
-pleased, as it were, to see themselves humanised by some sort of
-fellowship with their kind. Indeed, it may be said that the moral
-of the piece is to show the <em>vulgarity</em> of vice; and that the same
-violations of integrity and decorum, the same habitual sophistry in
-palliating their want of principle, are common to the great and
-powerful, with the lowest and most contemptible of the species.
-What can be more convincing than the arguments used by these
-would-be politicians, to shew that in hypocrisy, selfishness, and
-treachery, they do not come up to many of their betters? The
-exclamation of <em>Mrs. Peachum</em>, when her daughter marries <em>Macheath</em>,
-‘Hussey, hussey, you will be as ill used, and as much neglected, as if
-you had married a lord,’ is worth all Miss Hannah More’s laboured
-invectives on the laxity of the manners of high life!<a id='r46' /><a href='#f46' class='c012'><sup>[46]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>W. H.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>
- <h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>No. 18.</span>]&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; ON PATRIOTISM.—A FRAGMENT&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; [<span class='sc'>Jan. 5, 1814.</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>Patriotism, in modern times, and in great states, is and must be the
-creature of reason and reflection, rather than the offspring of physical
-or local attachment. Our country is a complex, abstract existence,
-recognised only by the understanding. It is an immense riddle, containing
-numberless modifications of reason and prejudice, of thought
-and passion. Patriotism is not, in a strict or exclusive sense, a
-natural or personal affection, but a law of our rational and moral
-nature, strengthened and determined by particular circumstances and
-associations, but not born of them, nor wholly nourished by them.
-It is not possible that we should have an individual attachment to
-sixteen millions of men, any more than to sixty millions. We cannot
-be <em>habitually</em> attached to places we never saw, and people we never
-heard of. Is not the name of Englishman a general term, as well as
-that of man? How many varieties does it not combine within it?
-Are the opposite extremities of the globe our native place, because
-they are a part of that geographical and political denomination, our
-country? Does natural affection expand in circles of latitude and
-longitude? What personal or instinctive sympathy has the English
-peasant with the African slave-driver, or East Indian Nabob? Some
-of our wretched bunglers in metaphysics would fain persuade us to
-discard all general humanity, and all sense of abstract justice, as a
-violation of natural affection, and yet do not see that the love of our
-country itself is in the list of our general affections. The common
-notions of patriotism are transmitted down to us from the savage
-tribes, where the fate and condition of all was the same, or from the
-states of Greece and Rome, where the country of the citizen was
-the town in which he was born. Where this is no longer the case,—where
-our country is no longer contained within the narrow circle of
-the same walls,—where we can no longer behold its glimmering
-horizon from the top of our native mountains—beyond these limits,
-it is not a natural but an artificial idea, and our love of it either a
-deliberate dictate of reason, or a cant term. It was said by an acute
-observer, and eloquent writer (Rousseau) that the love of mankind
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>was nothing but the love of justice: the same might be said, with
-considerable truth, of the love of our country. It is little more than
-another name for the love of liberty, of independence, of peace, and
-social happiness. We do not say that other indirect and collateral
-circumstances do not go to the superstructure of this sentiment (as
-language,<a id='r47' /><a href='#f47' class='c012'><sup>[47]</sup></a> literature, manners, national customs), but this is the broad
-and firm basis.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>No. 19.</span>]&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; ON BEAUTY&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; [<span class='sc'>Feb. 4, 1816.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>It is about sixty years ago that Sir Joshua Reynolds, in three papers
-which he wrote in the <cite>Idler</cite>, advanced the notion, which has prevailed
-very much ever since, that Beauty was entirely dependent on
-custom, or on the conformity of objects to a given standard. Now,
-we could never persuade ourselves that custom, or the association of
-ideas, though a very powerful, was the only principle of the preference
-which the mind gives to certain objects over others. Novelty is
-surely one source of pleasure; otherwise we cannot account for the
-well-known epigram, beginning—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Two happy things in marriage are allowed,’ etc.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Nor can we help thinking, that, besides custom, or the conformity of
-certain objects to others of the same general class, there is also a
-certain conformity of objects to themselves, a symmetry of parts, a
-principle of proportion, gradation, harmony (call it what you will),
-which makes certain things naturally pleasing or beautiful, and the
-want of it the contrary.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>We will not pretend to define what Beauty is, after so many
-learned authors have failed; but we shall attempt to give some
-examples of what constitutes it, to shew that it is in some way
-inherent in the object, and that if custom is a second nature, there
-is another nature which ranks before it. Indeed, the idea that all
-pleasure and pain depend on the association of ideas is manifestly
-absurd: there must be something in itself pleasurable or painful, before
-it could become possible for the feelings of pleasure or pain to be
-transferred by association from one object to another.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Regular features are generally accounted handsome; but regular
-features are those, the outlines of which answer most nearly to each
-other, or undergo the fewest abrupt changes. We shall attempt to
-explain this idea by a reference to the Greek and African face; the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>first of which is beautiful, because it is made up of lines corresponding
-with or melting into each other: the last is not so, because it is made
-up almost entirely of contradictory lines and sharp angular projections.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The general principle of the difference between the two heads is
-this: the forehead of the Greek is square and upright, and, as it
-were, overhangs the rest of the face, except the nose, which is a
-continuation of it almost in an even line. In the Negro or African,
-the tip of the nose is the most projecting part of the face; and from
-that point the features retreat back, both upwards towards the forehead,
-and downwards to the chin. This last form is an approximation
-to the shape of the head of the animal, as the former bears the
-strongest stamp of humanity.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Grecian nose is regular, the African irregular. In other
-words, the Grecian nose seen in profile forms nearly a straight line
-with the forehead, and falls into the upper lip by two curves, which
-balance one another: seen in front, the two sides are nearly parallel
-to each other, and the nostrils and lower part form regular curves,
-answering to one another, and to the contours of the mouth. On
-the contrary, the African pug-nose is more ‘like an ace of clubs.’
-Whichever way you look at it, it presents the appearance of a triangle.
-It is narrow, and drawn to a point at top, broad and flat at bottom.
-The point is peaked, and recedes abruptly to the level of the forehead
-or the mouth, and the nostrils are as if they were drawn up with
-hooks towards each other. All the lines cross each other at sharp
-angles. The forehead of the Greeks is flat and square, till it is
-rounded at the temples; the African forehead, like the ape’s, falls
-back towards the top, and spreads out at the sides, so as to form an
-angle with the cheek-bones. The eyebrows of the Greeks are either
-straight, so as to sustain the lower part of the tablet of the forehead,
-or gently arched, so as to form the outer circle of the curves of the
-eyelids. The form of the eyes gives all the appearance of orbs,
-full, swelling, and involved within each other; the African eyes
-are flat, narrow at the corners, in the shape of a tortoise, and the
-eyebrows fly off slantwise to the sides of the forehead. The idea of
-the superiority of the Greek face in this respect is admirably expressed
-in Spenser’s description of Belphœbe:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Her ivory forehead, full of bounty brave,</div>
- <div class='line'>Like a broad table did itself dispread,</div>
- <div class='line'>For love therein his triumphs to engrave,</div>
- <div class='line'>And write the battles of his great Godhead.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Upon her eyelids many Graces sat</div>
- <div class='line'>Under the shadow of her even brows.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>The head of the girl in the <cite>Transfiguration</cite> (which Raphael
-took from the <cite>Niobe</cite>) has the same correspondence and exquisite
-involution of the outline of the forehead, the eyebrows, and the eyes
-(circle within circle) which we here speak of. Every part of that
-delightful head is blended together, and every sharp projection
-moulded and softened down, with the feeling of a sculptor, or as if
-nothing should be left to offend the <em>touch</em> as well as eye. Again, the
-Greek mouth is small, and little wider than the lower part of the
-nose: the lips form waving lines, nearly answering to each other;
-the African mouth is twice as wide as the nose, projects in front,
-and falls back towards the ears—is sharp and triangular, and consists
-of one protruding and one distended lip. The chin of the Greek
-face is round and indented, curled in, forming a fine oval with the
-outline of the cheeks, which resemble the two halves of a plane
-parallel with the forehead, and rounded off like it. The Negro chin
-falls inwards like a dew-lap, is nearly bisected in the middle, flat at
-bottom, and joined abruptly to the rest of the face, the whole contour
-of which is made up of jagged cross-grained lines. The African
-physiognomy appears, indeed, splitting in pieces, starting out in every
-oblique direction, and marked by the most sudden and violent changes
-throughout: the whole of the Grecian face blends with itself in a
-state of the utmost harmony and repose.<a id='r48' /><a href='#f48' class='c012'><sup>[48]</sup></a> There is a harmony of
-expression as well as a symmetry of form. We sometimes see a face
-melting into beauty by the force of sentiment—an eye that, in its
-liquid mazes, for ever expanding and for ever retiring within itself,
-draws the soul after it, and tempts the rash beholder to his fate.
-This is, perhaps, what Werter meant, when he says of Charlotte,
-‘Her full dark eyes are ever before me, like a sea, like a precipice.’
-The historical in expression is the consistent and harmonious,—whatever
-in thought or feeling communicates the same movement, whether
-voluptuous or impassioned, to all the parts of the face, the mouth, the
-eyes, the forehead, and shews that they are all actuated by the same
-spirit. For this reason it has been observed, that all intellectual and
-impassioned faces are historical,—the heads of philosophers, poets,
-lovers, and madmen.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Motion is beautiful as it implies either continuity or gradual change.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>The motion of a hawk is beautiful, either returning in endless circles
-with suspended wings, or darting right forward in one level line upon
-its prey. We have, when boys, often watched the glittering down
-of the thistle, at first scarcely rising above the ground, and then,
-mingling with the gale, borne into the upper sky with varying fantastic
-motion. How delightful, how beautiful! All motion is beautiful
-that is not contradictory to itself,—that is free from sudden jerks and
-shocks,—that is either sustained by the same impulse, or gradually
-reconciles different impulses together. Swans resting on the calm
-bosom of a lake, in which their image is reflected, or moved up and
-down with the heaving of the waves, though by this the double
-image is disturbed, are equally beautiful. Homer describes Mercury
-as flinging himself from the top of Olympus, and skimming the surface
-of the ocean. This is lost in Pope’s translation, who suspends him
-on the incumbent air. The beauty of the original image consists in
-the idea which it conveys of smooth, uninterrupted speed, of the
-evasion of every let or obstacle to the progress of the God.<a id='r49' /><a href='#f49' class='c012'><sup>[49]</sup></a> Awkwardness
-is occasioned by a difficulty in moving, or by disjointed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>movements, that distract the attention and defeat each other. Grace is
-the absence of every thing that indicates pain or difficulty, or hesitation
-or incongruity. The only graceful dancer we ever saw was Deshayes,
-the Frenchman. He came on bounding like a stag. It was not
-necessary to have seen good dancing before to know that this was
-really fine. Whoever has seen the sea in motion, the branches of a
-tree waving in the air, would instantly perceive the resemblance.
-Flexibility and grace are to be found in nature as well as at the opera.
-Mr. Burke, in his Essay on the Sublime and Beautiful, has very
-admirably described the bosom of a beautiful woman, almost entirely
-with reference to the ideas of motion. Those outlines are beautiful
-which describe pleasant motions. A fine use is made of this principle
-by one of the apocryphal writers, in describing the form of the rainbow.
-‘He hath set his bow in the heavens, and his hands have
-bended it.’ Harmony in colour has not been denied to be a natural
-property of objects, consisting in the gradations of intermediate colours.
-The principle appears to be here the same as in some of the former
-instances. The effect of colour in Titian’s Bath of Diana, at the
-Marquis of Stafford’s, is perhaps the finest in the world, made up of
-the richest contrasts, blended together by the most masterly gradations.
-Harmony of sound depends apparently on the same principle as
-harmony of colour. Rhyme depends on the pleasure derived from a
-recurrence of similar sounds, as symmetry of features does on the
-correspondence of the different outlines. The prose style of Dr.
-Johnson originated in the same principle. The secret consisted in
-rhyming on the sense, and balancing one half of the sentence uniformly
-and systematically against the other. The Hebrew poetry
-was constructed in the same manner.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>W.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>No. 20.</span>]&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; ON IMITATION&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; [<span class='sc'>Feb. 18, 1816.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>Objects in themselves disagreeable or indifferent, often please in the
-imitation. A brick-floor, a pewter-plate, an ugly cur barking, a
-Dutch boor smoking or playing at skittles, the inside of a shambles,
-a fishmonger’s or a greengrocer’s stall, have been made very interesting
-as pictures by the fidelity, skill, and spirit, with which they have been
-copied. One source of the pleasure thus received is undoubtedly
-the surprise or feeling of admiration, occasioned by the unexpected
-coincidence between the imitation and the object. The deception,
-however, not only pleases at first sight, or from mere novelty; but
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>it continues to please upon farther acquaintance, and in proportion to
-the insight we acquire into the distinctions of nature and of art. By
-far the most numerous class of connoisseurs are the admirers of pictures
-of <em>still life</em>, which have nothing but the elaborateness of the execution
-to recommend them. One chief reason, it should seem then, why
-imitation pleases, is, because, by exciting curiosity, and inviting a comparison
-between the object and the representation, it opens a new field
-of inquiry, and leads the attention to a variety of details and distinctions
-not perceived before. This latter source of the pleasure derived
-from imitation has never been properly insisted on.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The anatomist is delighted with a coloured plate, conveying the
-exact appearance of the progress of certain diseases, or of the internal
-parts and dissections of the human body. We have known a
-Jennerian Professor as much enraptured with a delineation of the
-different stages of vaccination, as a florist with a bed of tulips, or an
-auctioneer with a collection of Indian shells. But in this case, we
-find that not only the imitation pleases,—the objects themselves give as
-much pleasure to the professional inquirer, as they would pain to the
-uninitiated. The learned amateur is struck with the beauty of the
-coats of the stomach laid bare, or contemplates with eager curiosity
-the transverse section of the brain, divided on the new Spurzheim
-principles. It is here, then, the number of the parts, their distinctions,
-connections, structure, uses; in short, an entire new set of
-ideas, which occupies the mind of the student, and overcomes the
-sense of pain and repugnance, which is the only feeling that the sight
-of a dead and mangled body presents to ordinary men. It is the
-same in art as in science. The painter of still life, as it is called,
-takes the same pleasure in the object as the spectator does in the
-imitation; because by habit he is led to perceive all those distinctions
-in nature, to which other persons never pay any attention till they are
-pointed out to them in the picture. The vulgar only see nature as it
-is reflected to them from art; the painter sees the picture in nature,
-before he transfers it to the canvass. He refines, he analyses, he
-remarks fifty things, which escape common eyes; and this affords a
-distinct source of reflection and amusement to him, independently of
-the beauty or grandeur of the objects themselves, or of their connection
-with other impressions besides those of sight. The charm of
-the Fine Arts, then, does not consist in any thing peculiar to imitation,
-even where only imitation is concerned, since <em>there</em>, where art exists
-in the highest perfection, namely, in the mind of the artist, the
-object excites the same or greater pleasure, before the imitation exists.
-Imitation renders an object, displeasing in itself, a source of pleasure,
-not by repetition of the same idea, but by suggesting new ideas, by
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>detecting new properties, and endless shades of difference, just as a
-close and continued contemplation of the object itself would do.
-Art shows us nature, divested of the medium of our prejudices. It
-divides and decompounds objects into a thousand curious parts, which
-may be full of variety, beauty, and delicacy in themselves, though
-the object to which they belong may be disagreeable in its general
-appearance, or by association with other ideas. A painted marigold
-is inferior to a painted rose only in form and colour: it loses nothing in
-point of smell. Yellow hair is perfectly beautiful in a picture. To
-a person lying with his face close to the ground in a summer’s day,
-the blades of spear-grass will appear like tall forest trees, shooting up
-into the sky; as an insect seen through a microscope is magnified
-into an elephant. Art is the microscope of the mind, which sharpens
-the wit as the other does the sight; and converts every object into a
-little universe in itself.<a id='r50' /><a href='#f50' class='c012'><sup>[50]</sup></a> Art may be said to draw aside the veil from
-nature. To those who are perfectly unskilled in the practice,
-unimbued with the principles of art, most objects present only a confused
-mass. The pursuit of art is liable to be carried to a contrary
-excess, as where it produces a rage for the <em>picturesque</em>. You cannot
-go a step with a person of this class, but he stops you to point out
-some choice bit of landscape, or fancied improvement, and teazes
-you almost to death with the frequency and insignificance of his
-discoveries!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is a common opinion, (which may be worth noticing here), that
-the study of physiognomy has a tendency to make people satirical,
-and the knowledge of art to make them fastidious in their taste.
-Knowledge may, indeed, afford a handle to ill-nature; but it takes
-away the principal temptation to its exercise, by supplying the mind
-with better resources against <em>ennui</em>. Idiots are always mischievous;
-and the most superficial persons are the most disposed to find fault,
-because they understand the fewest things. The English are more apt
-than any other nation to treat foreigners with contempt, because they
-seldom see anything but their own dress and manners; and it is only
-in petty provincial towns that you meet with persons who pride themselves
-on being satirical. In every country place in England there
-are one or two persons of this description who keep the whole neighbourhood
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>in terror. It is not to be denied that the study of the
-<em>ideal</em> in art, if separated from the study of nature, may have the effect
-above stated, of producing dissatisfaction and contempt for everything
-but itself, as all affectation must; but to the genuine artist,
-truth, nature, beauty, are almost different names for the same
-thing.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Imitation interests, then, by exciting a more intense perception of
-truth, and calling out the powers of observation and comparison:
-wherever this effect takes place the interest follows of course, with
-or without the imitation, whether the object is real or artificial. The
-gardener delights in the streaks of a tulip, or ‘pansy freak’d with jet’;
-the mineralogist in the varieties of certain strata, because he understands
-them. Knowledge is pleasure as well as power. A work of
-art has in this respect no advantage over a work of nature, except
-inasmuch as it furnishes an additional stimulus to curiosity. Again,
-natural objects please in proportion as they are uncommon, by fixing
-the attention more steadily on their beauties or differences. The
-same principle of the effect of novelty in exciting the attention, may
-account, perhaps, for the extraordinary discoveries and lies told by
-travellers, who, opening their eyes for the first time in foreign parts,
-are startled at every object they meet.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Why the excitement of intellectual activity pleases, is not here the
-question; but that it does so, is a general and acknowledged law of
-the human mind. We grow attached to the mathematics only from
-finding out their truth; and their utility chiefly consists (at present)
-in the contemplative pleasure they afford to the student. Lines,
-points, angles, squares, and circles are not interesting in themselves;
-they become so by the power of mind exerted in comprehending their
-properties and relations. People dispute for ever about Hogarth.
-The question has not in one respect been fairly stated. The merit
-of his pictures does not so much depend on the nature of the subject,
-as on the knowledge displayed of it, on the number of ideas they
-excite, on the fund of thought and observation contained in them.
-They are to be looked on as works of science; they gratify our love
-of truth; they fill up the void of the mind: they are a series of
-plates of natural history, and also of that most interesting part of
-natural history, the history of man. The superiority of high art over
-the common or mechanical consists in combining truth of imitation
-with beauty and grandeur of subject. The historical painter is
-superior to the flower-painter, because he combines or ought to combine
-human interests and passions with the same power of imitating
-external nature; or, indeed, with greater, for the greatest difficulty
-of imitation is the power of imitating expression. The difficulty of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>copying increases with our knowledge of the object; and that again
-with the interest we take in it. The same argument might be applied
-to shew that the poet and painter of imagination are superior to the
-mere philosopher or man of science, because they exercise the powers
-of reason and intellect combined with nature and passion. They treat
-of the highest categories of the human soul, pleasure and pain.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>From the foregoing train of reasoning, we may easily account for
-the too great tendency of art to run into pedantry and affectation.
-There is ‘a pleasure in art which none but artists feel.’ They see
-beauty where others see nothing of the sort, in wrinkles, deformity,
-and old age. They see it in Titian’s Schoolmaster as well as in
-Raphael’s Galatea; in the dark shadows of Rembrandt as well as
-in the splendid colours of Rubens; in an angel’s or in a butterfly’s
-wings. They see with different eyes from the multitude. But true
-genius, though it has new sources of pleasure opened to it, does not
-lose its sympathy with humanity. It combines truth of imitation with
-effect, the parts with the whole, the means with the end. The
-mechanic artist sees only that which nobody else sees, and is conversant
-only with the technical language and difficulties of his art. A
-painter, if shewn a picture, will generally dwell upon the academic
-skill displayed in it, and the knowledge of the received rules of composition.
-A musician, if asked to play a tune, will select that which
-is the most difficult and the least intelligible. The poet will be struck
-with the harmony of versification, or the elaborateness of the arrangement
-in a composition. The conceits in Shakspeare were his greatest
-delight; and improving upon this perverse method of judging, the
-German writers, Goethe and Schiller, look upon Werter and The
-Robbers as the worst of all their works, because they are the most
-popular. Some artists among ourselves have carried the same principle
-to a singular excess.<a id='r51' /><a href='#f51' class='c012'><sup>[51]</sup></a> If professors themselves are liable to this
-kind of pedantry, connoisseurs and dilettanti, who have less sensibility
-and more affectation, are almost wholly swayed by it. They see
-nothing in a picture but the execution. They are proud of their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>knowledge in proportion as it is a secret. The worst judges of pictures
-in the United Kingdom are, first, picture-dealers; next, perhaps, the
-Directors of the British Institution; and after them, in all probability,
-the Members of the Royal Academy.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>T. T.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>No. 21.</span>]&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; ON <em>GUSTO</em>&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; [<span class='sc'>May 26, 1816.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>Gusto in art is power or passion defining any object. It is not so
-difficult to explain this term in what relates to expression (of which
-it may be said to be the highest degree) as in what relates to things
-without expression, to the natural appearances of objects, as mere
-colour or form. In one sense, however, there is hardly any object
-entirely devoid of expression, without some character of power belonging
-to it, some precise association with pleasure or pain: and it is in
-giving this truth of character from the truth of feeling, whether in the
-highest or the lowest degree, but always in the highest degree of which
-the subject is capable, that gusto consists.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There is a gusto in the colouring of Titian. Not only do his heads
-seem to think—his bodies seem to feel. This is what the Italians
-mean by the <em>morbidezza</em> of his flesh-colour. It seems sensitive and
-alive all over; not merely to have the look and texture of flesh, but
-the feeling in itself. For example, the limbs of his female figures
-have a luxurious softness and delicacy, which appears conscious of the
-pleasure of the beholder. As the objects themselves in nature would
-produce an impression on the sense, distinct from every other object,
-and having something divine in it, which the heart owns and the
-imagination consecrates, the objects in the picture preserve the same
-impression, absolute, unimpaired, stamped with all the truth of passion,
-the pride of the eye, and the charm of beauty. Rubens makes his
-flesh-colour like flowers; Albano’s is like ivory; Titian’s is like flesh,
-and like nothing else. It is as different from that of other painters,
-as the skin is from a piece of white or red drapery thrown over it.
-The blood circulates here and there, the blue veins just appear, the
-rest is distinguished throughout only by that sort of tingling sensation
-to the eye, which the body feels within itself. This is gusto.
-Vandyke’s flesh-colour, though it has great truth and purity, wants
-gusto. It has not the internal character, the living principle in it.
-It is a smooth surface, not a warm, moving mass. It is painted without
-passion, with indifference. The hand only has been concerned.
-The impression slides off from the eye, and does not, like the tones
-of Titian’s pencil, leave a sting behind it in the mind of the spectator.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>The eye does not acquire a taste or appetite for what it sees. In a
-word, gusto in painting is where the impression made on one sense
-excites by affinity those of another.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Michael Angelo’s forms are full of gusto. They everywhere
-obtrude the sense of power upon the eye. His limbs convey an idea
-of muscular strength, of moral grandeur, and even of intellectual
-dignity: they are firm, commanding, broad, and massy, capable of
-executing with ease the determined purposes of the will. His faces
-have no other expression than his figures, conscious power and
-capacity. They appear only to think what they shall do, and to know
-that they can do it. This is what is meant by saying that his style
-is hard and masculine. It is the reverse of Correggio’s, which is
-effeminate. That is, the gusto of Michael Angelo consists in
-expressing energy of will without proportionable sensibility, Correggio’s
-in expressing exquisite sensibility without energy of will. In
-Correggio’s faces as well as figures we see neither bones nor muscles,
-but then what a soul is there, full of sweetness and of grace—pure,
-playful, soft, angelical! There is sentiment enough in a hand painted
-by Correggio to set up a school of history painters. Whenever we
-look at the hands of Correggio’s women or of Raphael’s, we always
-wish to touch them.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Again, Titian’s landscapes have a prodigious gusto, both in the
-colouring and forms. We shall never forget one that we saw many
-years ago in the Orleans Gallery of Acteon hunting. It had a
-brown, mellow, autumnal look. The sky was of the colour of stone.
-The winds seemed to sing through the rustling branches of the trees,
-and already you might hear the twanging of bows resound through
-the tangled mazes of the wood. Mr. West, we understand, has this
-landscape. He will know if this description of it is just. The landscape
-back-ground of the St. Peter Martyr is another well known
-instance of the power of this great painter to give a romantic interest
-and an appropriate character to the objects of his pencil, where every
-circumstance adds to the effect of the scene,—the bold trunks of the
-tall forest trees, the trailing ground plants, with that tall convent
-spire rising in the distance, amidst the blue sapphire mountains and the
-golden sky.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Rubens has a great deal of gusto in his Fauns and Satyrs, and in all
-that expresses motion, but in nothing else. Rembrandt has it in
-everything; everything in his pictures has a tangible character. If he
-puts a diamond in the ear of a burgomaster’s wife, it is of the first
-water; and his furs and stuffs are proof against a Russian winter.
-Raphael’s gusto was only in expression; he had no idea of the
-character of anything but the human form. The dryness and poverty
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>of his style in other respects is a phenomenon in the art. His trees
-are like sprigs of grass stuck in a book of botanical specimens. Was
-it that Raphael never had time to go beyond the walls of Rome?
-That he was always in the streets, at church, or in the bath? He was
-not one of the Society of Arcadians.<a id='r52' /><a href='#f52' class='c012'><sup>[52]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Claude’s landscapes, perfect as they are, want gusto. This is not
-easy to explain. They are perfect abstractions of the visible images
-of things; they speak the visible language of nature truly. They
-resemble a mirror or a microscope. To the eye only they are more
-perfect than any other landscapes that ever were or will be painted;
-they give more of nature, as cognisable by one sense alone; but they
-lay an equal stress on all visible impressions. They do not interpret
-one sense by another; they do not distinguish the character of
-different objects as we are taught, and can only be taught, to distinguish
-them by their effect on the different senses. That is, his eye
-wanted imagination: it did not strongly sympathise with his other
-faculties. He saw the atmosphere, but he did not feel it. He
-painted the trunk of a tree or a rock in the foreground as smooth—with
-as complete an abstraction of the gross, tangible impression, as
-any other part of the picture. His trees are perfectly beautiful, but
-quite immovable; they have a look of enchantment. In short, his
-landscapes are unequalled imitations of nature, released from its subjection
-to the elements, as if all objects were become a delightful
-fairy vision, and the eye had rarefied and refined away the other
-senses.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The gusto in the Greek statues is of a very singular kind. The
-sense of perfect form nearly occupies the whole mind, and hardly
-suffers it to dwell on any other feeling. It seems enough for them
-<em>to be</em>, without acting or suffering. Their forms are ideal, spiritual.
-Their beauty is power. By their beauty they are raised above the
-frailties of pain or passion; by their beauty they are deified.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The infinite quantity of dramatic invention in Shakspeare takes
-from his gusto. The power he delights to show is not intense, but
-discursive. He never insists on anything as much as he might, except
-a quibble. Milton has great gusto. He repeats his blows twice;
-grapples with and exhausts his subject. His imagination has a double
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>relish of its objects, an inveterate attachment to the things he describes,
-and to the words describing them.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in16'>——‘Or where Chineses drive</div>
- <div class='line'>With sails and wind their <em>cany</em> waggons <em>light</em>.’</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Wild above rule or art, <em>enormous</em> bliss.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>There is a gusto in Pope’s compliments, in Dryden’s satires, and
-Prior’s tales; and among prose writers Boccacio and Rabelais had
-the most of it. We will only mention one other work which appears
-to us to be full of gusto, and that is the <cite>Beggar’s Opera</cite>. If it is
-not, we are altogether mistaken in our notions on this delicate subject.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>W. H.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>No. 22.</span>]&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; ON PEDANTRY&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; [<span class='sc'>March 3, 1816.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>The power of attaching an interest to the most trifling or painful
-pursuits, in which our whole attention and faculties are engaged, is
-one of the greatest happinesses of our nature. The common soldier
-mounts the breach with joy; the miser deliberately starves himself
-to death; the mathematician sets about extracting the cube-root with
-a feeling of enthusiasm; and the lawyer sheds tears of admiration
-over Coke upon Littleton. It is the same through human life.
-He who is not in some measure a pedant, though he may be a wise,
-cannot be a very happy man.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The chief charm of reading the old novels is from the picture they
-give of the egotism of the characters, the importance of each individual
-to himself, and his fancied superiority over every one else. We like,
-for instance, the pedantry of Parson Adams, who thought a schoolmaster
-the greatest character in the world, and that he was the greatest
-schoolmaster in it. We do not see any equivalent for the satisfaction
-which this conviction must have afforded him in the most nicely
-graduated scale of talents and accomplishments to which he was an
-utter stranger. When the old-fashioned Scotch pedagogue turns
-Roderick Random round and round, and surveys him from head to
-foot with such infinite surprise and laughter, at the same time breaking
-out himself into gestures and exclamations still more uncouth and
-ridiculous, who would wish to have deprived him of this burst of
-extravagant self-complacency? When our follies afford equal delight
-to ourselves and those about us, what is there to be desired more?
-We cannot discover the vast advantage of ‘seeing ourselves as others
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>see us.’ It is better to have a contempt for any one than for
-ourselves!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>One of the most constant butts of ridicule, both in the old comedies
-and novels, is the professional jargon of the medical tribe. Yet it
-cannot be denied that this jargon, however affected it may seem, is
-the natural language of apothecaries and physicians, the mother-tongue
-of pharmacy! It is that by which their knowledge first comes
-to them, that with which they have the most obstinate associations,
-that in which they can express themselves the most readily and with
-the best effect upon their hearers; and though there may be some
-assumption of superiority in all this, yet it is only by an effort of
-circumlocution that they could condescend to explain themselves in
-ordinary language. Besides, there is a delicacy at bottom; as it is
-the only language in which a nauseous medicine can be decorously
-administered, or a limb taken off with the proper degree of secrecy.
-If the most blundering coxcombs affect this language most, what does
-it signify, while they retain the same dignified notions of themselves
-and their art, and are equally happy in their knowledge or their
-ignorance? The ignorant and pretending physician is a capital
-character in Moliere: and, indeed, throughout his whole plays the
-great source of the comic interest is in the fantastic exaggeration of
-blind self-love, in letting loose the habitual peculiarities of each individual
-from all restraint of conscious observation or self-knowledge,
-in giving way to that specific levity of impulse which mounts at once
-to the height of absurdity, in spite of the obstacles that surround it,
-as a fluid in a barometer rises according to the pressure of the external
-air! His characters are almost always pedantic, and yet the most
-unconscious of all others. Take, for example, those two worthy
-gentlemen, Monsieur Jourdain and Monsieur Pourceaugnac.<a id='r53' /><a href='#f53' class='c012'><sup>[53]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Learning and pedantry were formerly synonymous; and it was
-well when they were so. Can there be a higher satisfaction than
-for a man to understand Greek, and to believe that there is nothing
-else worth understanding? Learning is the knowledge of that which
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>is not generally known. What an ease and a dignity in pretensions,
-founded on the ignorance of others! What a pleasure in wondering,
-what a pride in being wondered at! In the library of the family
-where we were brought up, stood the <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Fratres Poloni</span></i>; and we can
-never forget or describe the feeling with which not only their appearance,
-but the names of the authors on the outside inspired us.
-Pripscovius, we remember, was one of the easiest to pronounce. The
-gravity of the contents seemed in proportion to the weight of the
-volumes; the importance of the subjects increased with our ignorance
-of them. The trivialness of the remarks, if ever we looked
-into them,—the repetitions, the monotony, only gave a greater solemnity
-to the whole, as the slowness and minuteness of the evidence
-adds to the impressiveness of a judicial proceeding. We knew that
-the authors had devoted their whole lives to the production of these
-works, carefully abstaining from the introduction of any thing amusing
-or lively or interesting. In ten folio volumes there was not one sally
-of wit, one striking reflection. What, then, must have been their
-sense of the importance of the subject, the profound stores of knowledge
-which they had to communicate! ‘From all this world’s
-encumbrance they did themselves assoil.’ Such was the notion we
-then had of this learned lumber; yet we would rather have this
-feeling again for one half-hour than be possessed of all the acuteness
-of Bayle or the wit of Voltaire!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It may be considered as a sign of the decay of piety and learning
-in modern times, that our divines no longer introduce texts of the
-original Scriptures into their sermons. The very sound of the
-original Greek or Hebrew would impress the hearer with a more
-lively faith in the sacred writers than any translation, however literal
-or correct. It may be even doubted whether the translation of the
-Scriptures into the vulgar tongue was any advantage to the people.
-The mystery in which particular points of faith were left involved,
-gave an awe and sacredness to religious opinions: the general purport
-of the truths and promises of revelation was made known by other
-means; and nothing beyond this general and implicit conviction can
-be obtained, where all is undefined and infinite.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Again, it may be questioned whether, in matters of mere human
-reasoning, much has been gained by the disuse of the learned languages.
-Sir Isaac Newton wrote in Latin; and it is perhaps one of
-Bacon’s fopperies that he translated his works into English. If
-certain follies have been exposed by being stripped of their formal
-disguise, others have had a greater chance of succeeding, by being
-presented in a more pleasing and popular shape. This has been
-remarkably the case in France, (the least pedantic country in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>world), where the women mingle with everything, even with metaphysics,
-and where all philosophy is reduced to a set of phrases for
-the toilette. When books are written in the prevailing language of the
-country, every one becomes a critic who can read. An author is no
-longer tried by his peers. A species of universal suffrage is introduced
-in letters, which is only applicable to politics. The good old
-Latin style of our forefathers, if it concealed the dullness of the
-writer, at least was a barrier against the impertinence, flippancy, and
-ignorance of the reader. However, the immediate transition from
-the pedantic to the popular style in literature was a change that must
-have been very delightful at the time. Our illustrious predecessors,
-the <cite>Tatler</cite> and <cite>Spectator</cite>, were very happily off in this respect. They
-wore the public favour in its newest gloss, before it had become
-tarnished and common—before familiarity had bred contempt. It
-was the honey-moon of authorship. Their Essays were among the
-first instances in this country of learning sacrificing to the graces, and
-of a mutual understanding and good-humoured equality between the
-writer and the reader. This new style of composition, to use the
-phraseology of Mr. Burke, ‘mitigated authors into companions, and
-compelled wisdom to submit to the soft collar of social esteem.’ The
-original papers of the <cite>Tatler</cite>, printed on a half sheet of common
-foolscap, were regularly served up at breakfast-time with the silver
-tea-kettle and thin slices of bread and butter; and what the ingenious
-Mr. Bickerstaff wrote overnight in his easy chair, he might flatter
-himself would be read the next morning with elegant applause by the
-fair, the witty, the learned, and the great, in all parts of this kingdom,
-in which civilisation had made any considerable advances. The perfection
-of letters is when the highest ambition of the writer is to
-please his readers, and the greatest pride of the reader is to understand
-his author. The satisfaction on both sides ceases when the
-town becomes a club of authors, when each man stands with his
-manuscript in his hand waiting for his turn of applause, and when the
-claims on our admiration are so many, that, like those of common
-beggars, to prevent imposition they can only be answered with general
-neglect. Our self-love would be quite bankrupt, if critics by profession
-did not come forward as beadles to keep off the crowd, and
-to relieve us from the importunity of these innumerable candidates
-for fame, by pointing out their faults and passing over their beauties.
-In the more auspicious period just alluded to an author was regarded
-by the better sort as a man of genius, and by the vulgar, as a kind of
-prodigy; insomuch that the Spectator was obliged to shorten his
-residence at his friend Sir Roger de Coverley’s, from his being taken
-for a conjuror. Every state of society has its advantages and disadvantages.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>An author is at present in no danger of being taken for
-a conjuror!</p>
-
-<h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>No. 23.</span>]&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; THE SAME SUBJECT CONTINUED&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; [<span class='sc'>March 10, 1816.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>Life is the art of being well deceived; and in order that the deception
-may succeed, it must be habitual and uninterrupted. A constant
-examination of the value of our opinions and enjoyments, compared
-with those of others, may lessen our prejudices, but will leave nothing
-for our affections to rest upon. A multiplicity of objects unsettles
-the mind, and destroys not only all enthusiasm, but all sincerity of
-attachment, all constancy of pursuit; as persons accustomed to an
-itinerant mode of life never feel themselves at home in any place. It
-is by means of habit that our intellectual employments mix like our
-food with the circulation of the blood, and go on like any other part
-of the animal functions. To take away the force of habit and prejudice
-entirely, is to strike at the root of our personal existence. The
-book-worm, buried in the depth of his researches, may well say to
-the obtrusive shifting realities of the world, ‘Leave me to my repose!’
-We have seen an instance of a poetical enthusiast, who would have
-passed his life very comfortably in the contemplation of <em>his own idea</em>,
-if he had not been disturbed in his reverie by the Reviewers; and for
-our own parts, we think we could pass our lives very learnedly and
-classically in one of the quadrangles at Oxford, without any idea at
-all, vegetating merely on the air of the place. Chaucer has drawn a
-beautiful picture of a true scholar in his Clerk of Oxenford:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘A Clerk ther was of Oxenforde also,</div>
- <div class='line'>That unto logik, hadde longe ygo.</div>
- <div class='line'>As lene was his hors as is a rake,</div>
- <div class='line'>And he was not right fat, I undertake;</div>
- <div class='line'>But loked holwe, and thereto soberly.</div>
- <div class='line'>Ful thredbare was his overest courtepy,</div>
- <div class='line'>For he hadde geten him yit no benefice,</div>
- <div class='line'>Ne was nought worldly to have an office.</div>
- <div class='line'>For him was lever have at his beddes hed</div>
- <div class='line'>A twenty bokes, clothed in blak or red,</div>
- <div class='line'>Of Aristotle and his philosophie,</div>
- <div class='line'>Then robes riche, or fidel, or sautrie.</div>
- <div class='line'>But all be that he was a philosophre,</div>
- <div class='line'>Yet hadde he but litel gold in cofre,</div>
- <div class='line'>But al that he might of his frendes hente,</div>
- <div class='line'>On bokes and on lerning he it spente,</div>
- <div class='line'>And besily gan for the soules praie</div>
- <div class='line'>Of hem, that gave him wherwith to scolaie.</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>Of studie toke he moste care and hede.</div>
- <div class='line'>Not a word spake he more than was nede;</div>
- <div class='line'>And that was said in forme and reverence,</div>
- <div class='line'>And short, and quike, and full of high sentence.</div>
- <div class='line'>Sowning in moral vertue was his speche,</div>
- <div class='line'>And gladly wolde he lerne, and gladly teche.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>If letters have profited little by throwing down the barrier between
-learned prejudice and ignorant presumption, the arts have profited still
-less by the universal diffusion of accomplishment and pretension. An
-artist is no longer looked upon as any thing, who is not at the same
-time ‘chemist, statesman, fiddler, and buffoon.’ It is expected of
-him that he should be well-dressed, and he is poor; that he should
-move gracefully, and he has never learned to dance; that he should
-converse on all subjects, and he understands but one; that he should
-be read in different languages, and he only knows his own. Yet
-there is one language, the language of Nature, in which it is enough
-for him to be able to read, to find everlasting employment and solace
-to his thoughts—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Tongues in the trees, books in the running brooks,</div>
- <div class='line'>Sermons in stones, and good in every thing.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>He will find no end of his labours or of his triumphs there; yet still
-feel all his strength not more than equal to the task he has begun—his
-whole life too short for art. Rubens complained, that just as he
-was beginning to understand his profession, he was forced to quit it.
-It was a saying of Michael Angelo, that ‘painting was jealous, and
-required the whole man to herself.’ Is it to be supposed that
-Rembrandt did not find sufficient resources against the spleen in the
-little cell, where mystery and silence hung upon his pencil, or the
-noon-tide ray penetrated the solemn gloom around him, without the
-aid of modern newspapers, novels, and reviews? Was he not more
-wisely employed, while devoted solely to his art—married to that
-immortal bride! We do not imagine Sir Joshua Reynolds was
-much happier for having written his lectures, nor for the learned
-society he kept, friendship apart; and learned society is not necessary
-to friendship. He was evidently, as far as conversation was concerned,
-little at his ease in it; and he was always glad, as he himself
-said, after he had been entertained at the houses of the great, to get
-back to his painting-room again. Any one settled pursuit, together
-with the ordinary alternations of leisure, exercise, and amusement,
-and the natural feelings and relations of society, is quite enough to
-take up the whole of our thoughts, time, and affections; and any thing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>beyond this will, generally speaking, only tend to dissipate and distract
-the mind. There is no end of accomplishments, of the prospect
-of new acquisitions of taste or skill, or of the uneasiness arising from
-the want of them, if we once indulge in this idle habit of vanity and
-affectation. The mind is never satisfied with what it is, but is always
-looking out for fanciful perfections, which it can neither attain nor
-practise. Our failure in any one object is fatal to our enjoyment of
-all the rest; and the chances of disappointment multiply with the
-number of our pursuits. In catching at the shadow, we lose the
-substance. No man can thoroughly master more than one art or
-science. The world has never seen a perfect painter. What would
-it have availed for Raphael to have aimed at Titian’s colouring, or for
-Titian to have imitated Raphael’s drawing, but to have diverted each
-from the true bent of his natural genius, and to have made each
-sensible of his own deficiencies, without any probability of supplying
-them? Pedantry in art, in learning, in every thing, is the setting an
-extraordinary value on that which we can do, and that which we
-understand best, and which it is our business to do and understand.
-Where is the harm of this? To possess or even understand
-all kinds of excellence equally, is impossible; and to pretend to
-admire that to which we are indifferent, as much as that which is of
-the greatest use, and which gives the greatest pleasure to us, is not
-liberality, but affectation. Is an artist, for instance, to be required to
-feel the same admiration for the works of Handel as for those of
-Raphael? If he is sincere, he cannot: and a man, to be free from
-pedantry, must be either a coxcomb or a hypocrite. Vestris was so
-far in the right, in saying that Voltaire and he were the two greatest
-men in Europe. Voltaire was so in the public opinion, and he was
-so in his own. Authors and literary people have been unjustly
-accused for arrogating an exclusive preference to letters over other arts.
-They are justified in doing this, because words are the most natural
-and universal language, and because they have the sympathy of the
-world with them. Poets, for the same reason, have a right to be the
-vainest of authors. The prejudice attached to established reputation
-is, in like manner, perfectly well founded, because that which has
-longest excited our admiration and the admiration of mankind, is most
-entitled to admiration, on the score of habit, sympathy, and deference
-to public opinion. There is a sentiment attached to classical reputation,
-which cannot belong to new works of genius, till they become
-old in their turn.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There appears to be a natural division of labour in the ornamental
-as well as the mechanical arts of human life. We do not see why a
-nobleman should wish to shine as a poet, any more than to be dubbed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>a knight, or to be created Lord Mayor of London. If he succeeds,
-he gains nothing; and then if he is damned, what a ridiculous figure
-he makes! The great, instead of rivalling them, should keep authors,
-as they formerly kept fools,—a practice in itself highly laudable, and
-the disuse of which might be referred to as the first symptom of the
-degeneracy of modern times, and dissolution of the principles of
-social order! But of all the instances of a profession now unjustly
-obsolete, commend us to the alchemist. We see him sitting fortified
-in his prejudices, with his furnace, his diagrams, and his alembics;
-smiling at disappointments as proofs of the sublimity of his art, and the
-earnest of his future success: wondering at his own knowledge and the
-incredulity of others; fed with hope to the last gasp, and having all
-the pleasures without the pain of madness. What is there in the discoveries
-of modern chemistry equal to the very names of the <span class='sc'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Elixir
-Vitæ</span></span> and the <span class='sc'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Aurum Potabile</span></span>!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In <cite>Froissard’s Chronicles</cite> there is an account of a reverend Monk
-who had been a robber in the early part of his life, and who, when
-he grew old, used feelingly to lament that he had ever changed his
-profession. He said, ‘It was a goodly sight to sally out from his
-castle, and to see a troop of jolly friars coming riding that way, with
-their mules well laden with viands and rich stores, to advance towards
-them, to attack and overthrow them, returning to the castle with
-a noble booty.’ He preferred this mode of life to counting his beads
-and chaunting his vespers, and repented that he had ever been prevailed
-on to relinquish so laudable a calling. In this confession of remorse,
-we may be sure that there was no hypocrisy.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The difference in the character of the gentlemen of the present age
-and those of the old school, has been often insisted on. The character
-of a gentleman is a <em>relative term</em>, which can hardly subsist where there
-is no marked distinction of persons. The diffusion of knowledge, of
-artificial and intellectual equality, tends to level this distinction, and
-to confound that nice perception and high sense of honour, which
-arises from conspicuousness of situation, and a perpetual attention to
-personal propriety and the claims of personal respect. The age
-of chivalry is gone with the improvements in the art of war, which
-superseded the exercise of personal courage; and the character of
-a gentleman must disappear with those general refinements in
-manners, which render the advantages of rank and situation
-accessible almost to every one. The bag-wig and sword naturally
-followed the fate of the helmet and the spear, when these outward
-insignia no longer implied acknowledged superiority, and were a
-distinction without a difference.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The spirit of chivalrous and romantic love proceeded on the same
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>exclusive principle. It was an enthusiastic adoration, an idolatrous
-worship paid to sex and beauty. This, even in its blindest excess,
-was better than the cold indifference and prostituted gallantry of this
-philosophic age. The extreme tendency of civilisation is to dissipate
-all intellectual energy, and dissolve all moral principle. We are
-sometimes inclined to regret the innovations on the Catholic religion.
-It was a noble charter for ignorance, dullness, and prejudice of all
-kinds, (perhaps, after all, ‘the sovereign’st things on earth’), and put
-an effectual stop to the vanity and restlessness of opinion. ‘It wrapped
-the human understanding all round like a blanket.’ Since the
-Reformation, altars, unsprinkled by holy oil, are no longer sacred;
-and thrones, unsupported by the divine right, have become uneasy and
-insecure.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>W. H.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>No. 24.</span>]&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; ON THE CHARACTER OF ROUSSEAU&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; [<span class='sc'>April 14, 1816.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>Madame de Stael, in her Letters on the Writings and Character
-of Rousseau, gives it as her opinion, ‘that the imagination was
-the first faculty of his mind, and that this faculty even absorbed
-all the others.’<a id='r54' /><a href='#f54' class='c012'><sup>[54]</sup></a> And she farther adds, ‘Rousseau had great strength
-of reason on abstract questions, or with respect to objects, which
-have no reality but in the mind.’<a id='r55' /><a href='#f55' class='c012'><sup>[55]</sup></a> Both these opinions are
-radically wrong. Neither imagination nor reason can properly be
-said to have been the original predominant faculties of his mind.
-The strength both of imagination and reason, which he possessed, was
-borrowed from the excess of another faculty; and the weakness and
-poverty of reason and imagination, which are to be found in his
-works, may be traced to the same source, namely, that these faculties
-in him were artificial, secondary, and dependant, operating by a power
-not theirs, but lent to them. The only quality which he possessed in
-an eminent degree, which alone raised him above ordinary men, and
-which gave to his writings and opinions an influence greater, perhaps,
-than has been exerted by any individual in modern times, was
-extreme sensibility, or an acute and even morbid feeling of all that
-related to his own impressions, to the objects and events of his life.
-He had the most intense consciousness of his own existence. No object
-that had once made an impression on him was ever after effaced.
-Every feeling in his mind became a passion. His craving after
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>excitement was an appetite and a disease. His interest in his own
-thoughts and feelings was always wound up to the highest pitch; and
-hence the enthusiasm which he excited in others. He owed the
-power which he exercised over the opinions of all Europe, by which
-he created numberless disciples, and overturned established systems,
-to the tyranny which his feelings, in the first instance, exercised over
-himself. The dazzling blaze of his reputation was kindled by the
-same fire that fed upon his vitals.<a id='r56' /><a href='#f56' class='c012'><sup>[56]</sup></a> His ideas differed from those of
-other men only in their force and intensity. His genius was the effect
-of his temperament. He created nothing, he demonstrated nothing,
-by a pure effort of the understanding. His fictitious characters are
-modifications of his own being, reflections and shadows of himself.
-His speculations are the obvious exaggerations of a mind, giving a
-loose to its habitual impulses, and moulding all nature to its own
-purposes. Hence his enthusiasm and his eloquence, bearing down
-all opposition. Hence the warmth and the luxuriance, as well as the
-sameness of his descriptions. Hence the frequent verboseness of his
-style; for passion lends force and reality to language, and makes
-words supply the place of imagination. Hence the tenaciousness of
-his logic, the acuteness of his observations, the refinement and the
-inconsistency of his reasoning. Hence his keen penetration, and his
-strange want of comprehension of mind: for the same intense feeling
-which enabled him to discern the first principles of things, and seize
-some one view of a subject in all its ramifications, prevented him from
-admitting the operation of other causes which interfered with his
-favourite purpose, and involved him in endless wilful contradictions.
-Hence his excessive egotism, which filled all objects with himself,
-and would have occupied the universe with his smallest interest.
-Hence his jealousy and suspicion of others; for no attention, no
-respect or sympathy, could come up to the extravagant claims of his
-self-love. Hence his dissatisfaction with himself and with all around
-him; for nothing could satisfy his ardent longings after good, his restless
-appetite of being. Hence his feelings, overstrained and exhausted,
-recoiled upon themselves, and produced his love of silence and repose,
-his feverish aspirations after the quiet and solitude of nature. Hence
-in part also his quarrel with the artificial institutions and distinctions
-of society, which opposed so many barriers to the unrestrained
-indulgence of his will, and allured his imagination to scenes of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>pastoral simplicity or of savage life, where the passions were either not
-excited or left to follow their own impulse,—where the petty vexations
-and irritating disappointments of common life had no place,—and
-where the tormenting pursuits of arts and sciences were lost in pure
-animal enjoyment, or indolent repose. Thus he describes the first
-savage wandering for ever under the shade of magnificent forests, or
-by the side of mighty rivers, smit with the unquenchable love of
-nature!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The best of all his works is the <cite>Confessions</cite>, though it is that which
-has been least read, because it contains the fewest set paradoxes or
-general opinions. It relates entirely to himself; and no one was ever
-so much at home on this subject as he was. From the strong hold
-which they had taken of his mind, he makes us enter into his feelings
-as if they had been our own, and we seem to remember every incident
-and circumstance of his life as if it had happened to ourselves. We
-are never tired of this work, for it everywhere presents us with
-pictures which we can fancy to be counterparts of our own existence.
-The passages of this sort are innumerable. There is the interesting
-account of his childhood, the constraints and thoughtless liberty of
-which are so well described; of his sitting up all night reading
-romances with his father, till they were forced to desist by hearing
-the swallows twittering in their nests; his crossing the Alps, described
-with all the feelings belonging to it, his pleasure in setting out, his
-satisfaction in coming to his journey’s end, the delight of ‘coming
-and going he knew not where’; his arriving at Turin; the figure of
-Madame Basile, drawn with such inimitable precision and elegance;
-the delightful adventure of the Chateau de Toune, where he passed
-the day with Mademoiselle G**** and Mademoiselle Galley; the
-story of his Zulietta, the proud, the charming Zulietta, whose last
-words, ‘<i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Va Zanetto, e studia la Matematica</span></i>,’ were never to be forgotten;
-his sleeping near Lyons in a niche of the wall, after a fine
-summer’s day, with a nightingale perched above his head; his
-first meeting with Madame Warens, the pomp of sound with
-which he has celebrated her name, beginning ‘<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Louise Eleonore
-de Warens étoit<a id='t90'></a> une demoiselle de la Tour de Pil, noble et ancienne
-famille de Vevai, ville du pays de Vaud</span></i>’ (sounds which we still
-tremble to repeat); his description of her person, her angelic smile,
-her mouth of the size of his own; his walking out one day while the
-bells were chiming to vespers, and anticipating in a sort of waking
-dream the life he afterwards led with her, in which months and years,
-and life itself passed away in undisturbed felicity; the sudden disappointment
-of his hopes; his transport thirty years after at seeing the
-same flower which they had brought home together from one of their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>rambles near Chambery; his thoughts in that long interval of time;
-his suppers with Grimm and Diderot after he came to Paris; the first
-idea of his prize dissertation on the savage state; his account of
-writing the <cite>New Eloise</cite>, and his attachment to Madame d’Houdetot;
-his literary projects, his fame, his misfortunes, his unhappy temper;
-his last solitary retirement in the lake and island of Bienne, with his
-dog and his boat; his reveries and delicious musings there; all these
-crowd into our minds with recollections which we do not chuse to
-express. There are no passages in the <cite>New Eloise</cite> of equal force and
-beauty with the best descriptions in the <cite>Confessions</cite>, if we except the
-excursion on the water, Julia’s last letter to St. Preux, and his letter
-to her, recalling the days of their first loves. We spent two whole
-years in reading these two works; and (gentle reader, it was when we
-were young) in shedding tears over them</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>——‘As fast as the Arabian trees</div>
- <div class='line'>Their medicinal gums.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>They were the happiest years of our life. We may well say of them,
-sweet is the dew of their memory, and pleasant the balm of their
-recollection! There are, indeed, impressions which neither time nor
-circumstances can efface.<a id='r57' /><a href='#f57' class='c012'><sup>[57]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>Rousseau, in all his writings, never once lost sight of himself. He
-was the same individual from first to last. The spring that moved
-his passions never went down, the pulse that agitated his heart never
-ceased to beat. It was this strong feeling of interest, accumulating in
-his mind, which overpowers and absorbs the feelings of his readers.
-He owed all his power to sentiment. The writer who most nearly
-resembles him in our own times is the author of the <cite>Lyrical Ballads</cite>.
-We see no other difference between them, than that the one wrote in
-prose and the other in poetry; and that prose is perhaps better adapted
-to express those local and personal feelings, which are inveterate
-habits in the mind, than poetry, which embodies its imaginary
-creations. We conceive that Rousseau’s exclamation, ‘<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Ah, voila de
-la pervenche</span></i>,’ comes more home to the mind than Mr. Wordsworth’s
-discovery of the linnet’s nest ‘with five blue eggs,’ or than his address
-to the cuckoo, beautiful as we think it is; and we will confidently
-match the Citizen of Geneva’s adventures on the Lake of Bienne
-against the Cumberland Poet’s floating dreams on the Lake of
-Grasmere. Both create an interest out of nothing, or rather out of
-their own feelings; both weave numberless recollections into one
-sentiment; both wind their own being round whatever object occurs
-to them. But Rousseau, as a prose-writer, gives only the habitual
-and personal impression. Mr. Wordsworth, as a poet, is forced to
-lend the colours of imagination to impressions which owe all their
-force to their identity with themselves, and tries to paint what is only
-to be felt. Rousseau, in a word, interests you in certain objects by
-interesting you in himself: Mr. Wordsworth would persuade you that
-the most insignificant objects are interesting in themselves, because
-he is interested in them. If he had met with Rousseau’s favourite
-periwinkle, he would have <em>translated</em> it into the most beautiful of
-flowers. This is not imagination, but want of sense. If his jealousy
-of the sympathy of others makes him avoid what is beautiful and grand
-in nature, why does he undertake elaborately to describe other objects?
-<em>His</em> nature is a mere Dulcinea del Toboso, and he would make a
-Vashti of her. Rubens appears to have been as extravagantly attached
-to his three wives, as Raphael was to his Fornarina; but their faces
-were not so classical. The three greatest egotists that we know
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>of, that is, the three writers who felt their own being most powerfully
-and exclusively, are Rousseau, Wordsworth, and Benvenuto
-Cellini. As Swift somewhere says, we defy the world to furnish out
-a fourth.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>W. H.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>No. 25.</span>]&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; ON DIFFERENT SORTS OF FAME&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; [<span class='sc'>April 21, 1816.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>There is a half serious, half ironical argument in Melmoth’s
-<cite>Fitz-Osborn’s Letters</cite>, to shew the futility of posthumous fame,
-which runs thus: ‘The object of any one who is inspired with this
-passion is to be remembered by posterity with admiration and delight,
-as having been possessed of certain powers and excellences which
-distinguished him above his contemporaries. But posterity, it is said,
-can know nothing of the individual but from the memory of these
-qualities which he has left behind him. All that we know of Julius
-Cæsar, for instance, is that he was the person who performed certain
-actions, and wrote a book called his <cite>Commentaries</cite>. When, therefore,
-we extol Julius Cæsar for his actions or his writings, what do we say
-but that the person who performed certain things did perform them;
-that the author of such a work was the person who wrote it; or, in
-short, that Julius Cæsar was Julius Cæsar? Now this is a mere
-truism, and the desire to be the subject of such an identical proposition
-must, therefore, be an evident absurdity.’ The sophism is a
-tolerably ingenious one, but it is a sophism, nevertheless. It would
-go equally to prove the nullity, not only of posthumous fame, but of
-living reputation; for the good or the bad opinion which my next-door
-neighbour may entertain of me is nothing more than his conviction
-that such and such a person having certain good or bad
-qualities is possessed of them; nor is the figure, which a Lord-Mayor
-elect, a prating demagogue, or popular preacher, makes in the eyes
-of the admiring multitude—<em>himself</em>, but an image of him reflected in
-the minds of others, in connection with certain feelings of respect and
-wonder. In fact, whether the admiration we seek is to last for a day
-or for eternity, whether we are to have it while living or after we are
-dead, whether it is to be expressed by our contemporaries or by
-future generations, the principle of it is the same—<em>sympathy with the
-feelings of others</em>, and the necessary tendency which the idea or consciousness
-of the approbation of others has to strengthen the suggestions
-of our self-love.<a id='r58' /><a href='#f58' class='c012'><sup>[58]</sup></a> We are all inclined to think well of ourselves, of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>our sense and capacity in whatever we undertake; but from this very
-desire to think well of ourselves, we are (as <em>Mrs. Peachum</em> says)
-‘<em>bitter</em> bad judges’ of our own pretensions; and when our vanity
-flatters us most, we ought in general to suspect it most. We are,
-therefore, glad to get the good opinion of a friend, but that may be
-partial; the good word of a stranger is likely to be more sincere,
-but he may be a blockhead; the multitude will agree with us, if we
-agree with them; accident, the caprice of fashion, the prejudice of
-the moment, may give a fleeting reputation; our only certain appeal,
-therefore, is to posterity; the voice of fame is alone the voice of
-truth. In proportion, however, as this award is final and secure, it
-is remote and uncertain. Voltaire said to some one, who had
-addressed an Epistle to Posterity, ‘I am afraid, my friend, this letter
-will never be delivered according to its direction.’ It can exist only
-in imagination; and we can only presume upon our claim to it, as we
-prefer the hope of lasting fame to every thing else. The love of fame
-is almost another name for the love of excellence; or it is the ambition
-to attain the highest excellence, sanctioned by the highest
-authority, that of time. Vanity, and the love of fame, are quite
-distinct from each other; for the one is voracious of the most obvious
-and doubtful applause, whereas the other rejects or overlooks every
-kind of applause but that which is purified from every mixture of
-flattery, and identified with truth and nature itself. There is, therefore,
-something disinterested in this passion, inasmuch as it is abstracted
-and ideal, and only appeals to opinion as a standard of truth; it is
-this which ‘makes ambition virtue.’ Milton had as fine an idea as
-any one of true fame; and Dr. Johnson has very beautifully described
-his patient and confident anticipations of the success of his great poem
-in the account of <cite>Paradise Lost</cite>. He has, indeed, done the same
-thing himself in <em>Lycidas</em>:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Fame is the spur that the clear spirit doth raise</div>
- <div class='line'>(That last infirmity of noble mind)</div>
- <div class='line'>To scorn delights, and live laborious days;</div>
- <div class='line'>But the fair Guerdon when we hope to find,</div>
- <div class='line'>And think to burst out into sudden blaze,</div>
- <div class='line'>Comes the blind Fury with th’ abhorred shears,</div>
- <div class='line'>And slits the thin-spun life. But not the praise,</div>
- <div class='line'>Phœbus replied, and touch’d my trembling ears.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>None but those who have sterling pretensions can afford to refer
-them to time; as persons who live upon their means cannot well go
-into Chancery. No feeling can be more at variance with the true
-love of fame than that impatience which we have sometimes witnessed
-to ‘pluck its fruits, unripe and crude,’ before the time, to make a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>little echo of popularity mimic the voice of fame, and to convert a
-prize-medal or a newspaper-puff into a passport to immortality.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>When we hear any one complaining that he has not the same fame
-as some poet or painter who lived two hundred years ago, he seems
-to us to complain that he has not been dead these two hundred years.
-When his fame has undergone the same ordeal, that is, has lasted as
-long, it will be as good, if he really deserves it. We think it equally
-absurd, when we sometimes find people objecting, that such an acquaintance
-of theirs, who has not an idea in his head, should be so
-much better off in the world than they are. But it is for this very
-reason; they have preferred the indulgence of their ideas to the
-pursuit of realities. It is but fair that he who has no ideas should
-have something in their stead. If he who has devoted his time to
-the study of beauty, to the pursuit of truth, whose object has been
-to govern opinion, to form the taste of others, to instruct or to amuse
-the public, succeeds in this respect, he has no more right to complain
-that he has not a title or a fortune, than he who has not purchased
-a ticket, that is, who has taken no means to the end, has a right to
-complain that he has not a prize in the lottery.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In proportion as men can command the immediate and vulgar
-applause of others, they become indifferent to that which is remote
-and difficult of attainment. We take pains only when we are compelled
-to do it. Little men are remarked to have courage; little
-women to have wit; and it is seldom that a man of genius is a
-coxcomb in his dress. Rich men are contented not to be thought
-wise; and the Great often think themselves well off, if they can escape
-being the jest of their acquaintance. Authors were actuated by the
-desire of the applause of posterity, only so long as they were debarred
-of that of their contemporaries, just as we see the map of the gold-mines
-of Peru hanging in the room of Hogarth’s <cite>Distressed Poet</cite>.
-In the midst of the ignorance and prejudices with which they were
-surrounded, they had a sort of <em>forlorn hope</em> in the prospect of immortality.
-The spirit of universal criticism has superseded the anticipation
-of posthumous fame, and instead of waiting for the award of distant
-ages, the poet or prose-writer receives his final doom from the next
-number of the <cite>Edinburgh</cite> or <cite>Quarterly Review</cite>. According as the
-nearness of the applause increases, our impatience increases with it.
-A writer in a weekly journal engages with reluctance in a monthly
-publication: and again, a contributor to a daily paper sets about his
-task with greater spirit than either of them. It is like prompt
-payment. The effort and the applause go together. We, indeed,
-have known a man of genius and eloquence, to whom, from a habit
-of excessive talking, the certainty of seeing what he wrote in print
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>the next day was too remote a stimulus for his imagination, and who
-constantly laid aside his pen in the middle of an article, if a friend
-dropped in, to finish the subject more effectually aloud, so that the
-approbation of his hearer, and the sound of his own voice might be
-co-instantaneous. Members of Parliament seldom turn authors, except
-to print their speeches when they have not been distinctly heard or
-understood; and great orators are generally very indifferent writers,
-from want of sufficient inducement to exert themselves, when the
-immediate effect on others is not perceived, and the irritation of
-applause or opposition ceases.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There have been in the last century two singular examples of
-literary reputation, the one of an author without a name, and the
-other of a name without an author. We mean the author of <cite>Junius’s
-Letters</cite>, and the translator of the mottos to the <cite>Rambler</cite>, whose name
-was Elphinstone. The <cite>Rambler</cite> was published in the year 1750, and
-the name of Elphinstone prefixed to each paper is familiar to every
-literary reader, since that time, though we know nothing more of him.
-We saw this gentleman, since the commencement of the present
-century, looking over a clipped hedge in the country, with a broad-flapped
-hat, a venerable countenance, and his dress cut out with the
-same formality as his ever-greens. His name had not only survived
-half a century in conjunction with that of Johnson, but he had
-survived with it, enjoying all the dignity of a classical reputation, and
-the ease of a literary sinecure, on the strength of his mottos. The
-author of <cite>Junius’s Letters</cite> is, on the contrary, as remarkable an
-instance of a writer who has arrived at all the public honours of
-literature, without being known by name to a single individual, and
-who may be said to have realised all the pleasure of posthumous fame,
-while living, without the smallest gratification of personal vanity.
-An anonymous writer may feel an acute interest in what is said of
-his productions, and a secret satisfaction in their success, because it is
-not the effect of personal considerations, as the overhearing any one
-speak well of us is more agreeable than a direct compliment. But
-this very satisfaction will tempt him to communicate his secret. This
-temptation, however, does not extend beyond the circle of his
-acquaintance. With respect to the public, who know an author only
-by his writings, it is of little consequence whether he has a real or
-a fictitious name, or a signature, so that they have some clue by which
-to associate the works with the author. In the case of <em>Junius</em>, therefore,
-where other personal considerations of interest or connections
-might immediately counteract and set aside this temptation, the
-triumph over the mere vanity of authorship might not have cost him
-so dear as we are at first inclined to imagine. Suppose it to have
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>been the old Marquis of ——? It is quite out of the question that
-he should keep his places and not keep his secret. If ever the King
-should die, we think it not impossible that the secret may out.
-Certainly the <em>accouchement</em> of any princess in Europe would not
-excite an equal interest. ‘And you, then, Sir, are the author of
-<em>Junius</em>!’ What a recognition for the public and the author! That
-between Yorick and the Frenchman was a trifle to it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>We have said that we think the desire to be known by name as
-an author chiefly has a reference to those to whom we are known
-personally, and is strongest with regard to those who know most of
-our persons and least of our capacities. We wish to <em><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">subpœna</span></em> the
-public to our characters. Those who, by great services or great
-meannesses, have attained titles, always take them from the place with
-which they have the earliest associations, and thus strive to throw a
-veil of importance over the insignificance of their original pretensions,
-or the injustice of fortune. When Lord Nelson was passing over the
-quay at Yarmouth, to take possession of the ship to which he had
-been appointed, the people exclaimed, ‘Why make that little fellow
-a captain?’ He thought of this when he fought the battles of the
-Nile and Trafalgar. The same sense of personal insignificance which
-made him great in action made him a fool in love. If Bonaparte had
-been six inches higher, he never would have gone on that disastrous
-Russian expedition, nor ‘with that addition’ would he ever have been
-Emperor and King. For our own parts, one object which we have in
-writing these Essays, is to send them in a volume to a person who took
-some notice of us when children, and who augured, perhaps, better of
-us than we deserved. In fact, the opinion of those who know us
-most, who are a kind of second self in our recollections, is a sort of
-second conscience; and the approbation of one or two friends is all
-the immortality <em>we</em> pretend to.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>A.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>No. 26.</span>]&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; CHARACTER OF JOHN BULL&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; [<span class='sc'>May 19, 1816.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>In a late number of a respectable publication, there is the following
-description of the French character:—</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>‘Extremes meet. This is the only way of accounting for that
-enigma, the French character. It has often been remarked, that this
-ingenious nation exhibits more striking contradictions than any other
-that ever existed. They are the gayest of the gay, and the gravest
-of the grave. Their very faces pass at once from an expression of
-the most lively animation, when they are in conversation or in action,
-to a melancholy blank. They are the lightest and most volatile, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>at the same time the most plodding, mechanical, and laborious people
-in Europe. They are one moment the slaves of the most contemptible
-prejudices, and the next launch out into all the extravagance of the
-most abstract speculations. In matters of taste they are as inexorable
-as they are lax in questions of morality; they judge of the one by
-rules, of the other by their inclinations. It seems at times as if
-nothing could shock them, and yet they are offended at the merest
-trifles. The smallest things make the greatest impression on them.
-From the facility with which they can accommodate themselves to
-circumstances, they have no fixed principles or real character. They
-are always that which gives them least pain, or costs them least
-trouble. They easily disentangle their thoughts from whatever causes
-the slightest uneasiness, and direct their sensibility to flow in any
-channels they think proper. Their whole existence is more theatrical
-than real—their sentiments put on or off like the dress of an actor.
-Words are with them equivalent to things. They say what is agreeable,
-and believe what they say. Virtue and vice, good and evil,
-liberty and slavery, are matters almost of indifference. Their natural
-self-complacency stands them in stead of all other advantages.’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The foregoing account is pretty near the truth; we have nothing
-to say against it; but we shall here endeavour to do a like piece of
-justice to our countrymen, who are too apt to mistake the vices of
-others for so many virtues in themselves.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>If a Frenchman is pleased with every thing, John Bull is pleased
-with nothing, and that is a fault. He is, to be sure, fond of having
-his own way, till you let him have it. He is a very headstrong
-animal, who mistakes the spirit of contradiction for the love of independence,
-and proves himself to be in the right by the obstinacy
-with which he stickles for the wrong. You cannot put him so much
-out of his way as by agreeing with him. He is never in such good-humour
-as with what gives him the spleen, and is most satisfied when
-he is sulky. If you find fault with him, he is in a rage; and if you
-praise him, suspects you have a design upon him. He recommends
-himself to another by affronting him, and if that will not do, knocks
-him down to convince him of his sincerity. He gives himself such
-airs as no mortal ever did, and wonders at the rest of the world for
-not thinking him the most amiable person breathing. John means
-well too, but he has an odd way of showing it, by a total disregard
-of other people’s feelings and opinions. He is sincere, for he tells
-you at the first word he does not like you; and never deceives, for
-he never offers to serve you. A civil answer is too much to expect
-from him. A word costs him more than a blow. He is silent
-because he has nothing to say, and he looks stupid because he is so.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>He has the strangest notions of beauty. The expression he values
-most in the human countenance is an appearance of roast beef and
-plum-pudding; and if he has a red face and round belly, thinks himself
-a great man. He is a little purse-proud, and has a better opinion
-of himself for having made a full meal. But his greatest delight is
-in a bugbear. This he must have, be the consequence what it may.
-Whoever will give him that, may lead him by the nose, and pick his
-pocket at the same time. An idiot in a country town, a Presbyterian
-parson, a dog with a cannister tied to his tail, a bull-bait, or a fox-hunt,
-are irresistible attractions to him. The Pope was formerly his great
-aversion, and latterly, a cap of liberty is a thing he cannot abide. He
-discarded the Pope, and defied the Inquisition, called the French a
-nation of slaves and beggars, and abused their <em>Grand Monarque</em> for
-a tyrant, cut off one king’s head, and exiled another, set up a Dutch
-Stadtholder, and elected a Hanoverian Elector to be king over him,
-to shew he would have his own way, and to teach the rest of the
-world what they should do: but since other people took to imitating
-his example, John has taken it into his head to hinder them, will
-have a monopoly of rebellion and regicide to himself, has become
-sworn brother to the Pope, and stands by the Inquisition, restores
-his old enemies, the Bourbons, and reads <em>a great moral lesson</em> to their
-subjects, persuades himself that the Dutch Stadtholder and the
-Hanoverian Elector came to reign over him by divine right, and does
-all he can to prove himself a beast to make other people slaves. The
-truth is, John was always a surly, meddlesome, obstinate fellow, and
-of late years his <em>head</em> has not been quite right! In short, John is a
-great blockhead and a great bully, and requires (what he has been
-long labouring for) a hundred years of slavery to bring him to his
-senses. He will have it that he is a great patriot, for he hates all
-other countries; that he is wise, for he thinks all other people fools;
-that he is honest, for he calls all other people whores and rogues. If
-being in an ill-humour all one’s life is the perfection of human nature,
-then John is very near it. He beats his wife, quarrels with his
-neighbours, damns his servants, and gets drunk to kill the time and
-keep up his spirits, and firmly believes himself the only unexceptionable,
-accomplished, moral, and religious character in Christendom.
-He boasts of the excellence of the laws, and the goodness of his own
-disposition; and yet there are more people hanged in England than
-in all Europe besides: he boasts of the modesty of his countrywomen,
-and yet there are more prostitutes in the streets of London
-than in all the capitals of Europe put together. He piques himself
-on his comforts, because he is the most uncomfortable of mortals;
-and because he has no enjoyment in society, seeks it, as he says, at
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>his fireside, where he may be stupid as a matter of course, sullen as
-a matter of right, and as ridiculous as he chuses without being
-laughed at. His liberty is the effect of his self-will; his religion
-owing to the spleen; his temper to the climate. He is an industrious
-animal, because he has no taste for amusement, and had rather work
-six days in the week than be idle one. His awkward attempts at
-gaiety are the jest of other nations. ‘They,’ (the English), says
-Froissard, speaking of the meeting of the Black Prince and the
-French King, ‘amused themselves sadly, according to the custom of
-their country,’—<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">se rejouissoient tristement, selon la coutume de leur
-pays</span></i>. Their patience of labour is confined to what is repugnant
-and disagreeable in itself, to the drudgery of the mechanic arts,
-and does not extend to the fine arts; that is, they are indifferent
-to pain, but insensible to pleasure. They will stand in a trench, or
-march up to a breach, but they cannot bear to dwell long on an
-agreeable object. They can no more submit to regularity in art than
-to decency in behaviour. Their pictures are as coarse and slovenly
-as their address. John boasts of his great men, without much right
-to do so; not that he has not had them, but because he neither
-knows nor cares anything about them but to swagger over other
-nations. That which chiefly hits John’s fancy in Shakspeare is
-that he was a deer-stealer in his youth; and, as for Newton’s discoveries,
-he hardly knows to this day that the earth is round. John’s
-oaths, which are quite characteristic, have got him the nickname
-of <em>Monsieur God-damn-me</em>. They are profane, a Frenchman’s indecent.
-One swears by his vices, the other by their punishment.
-After all John’s blustering, he is but a dolt. His habitual jealousy
-of others makes him the inevitable dupe of quacks and impostors of
-all sorts; he goes all lengths with one party out of spite to another;
-his zeal is as furious as his antipathies are unfounded; and there is
-nothing half so absurd or ignorant of its own intentions as an English
-mob.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Z.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>No. 27.</span>]&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; ON GOOD-NATURE&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; [<span class='sc'>June 9, 1816.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>Lord Shaftesbury somewhere remarks, that a great many people
-pass for very good-natured persons, for no other reason than because
-they care about nobody but themselves; and, consequently, as nothing
-annoys them but what touches their own interest, they never irritate
-themselves unnecessarily about what does not concern them, and
-seem to be made of the very milk of human kindness.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Good-nature, or what is often considered as such, is the most
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>selfish of all the virtues: it is nine times out of ten mere indolence
-of disposition. A good-natured man is, generally speaking, one who
-does not like to be put out of his way; and as long as he can help
-it, that is, till the provocation comes home to himself, he will not.
-He does not create fictitious uneasiness out of the distresses of others;
-he does not fret and fume, and make himself uncomfortable about
-things he cannot mend, and that no way concern him, even if he
-could: but then there is no one who is more apt to be disconcerted
-by what puts him to any personal inconvenience, however trifling;
-who is more tenacious of his selfish indulgences, however unreasonable;
-or who resents more violently any interruption of his ease and
-comforts, the very trouble he is put to in resenting it being felt as
-an aggravation of the injury. A person of this character feels no
-emotions of anger or detestation, if you tell him of the devastation
-of a province, or the massacre of the inhabitants of a town, or the
-enslaving of a people; but if his dinner is spoiled by a lump of soot
-falling down the chimney, he is thrown into the utmost confusion,
-and can hardly recover a decent command of his temper for the whole
-day. He thinks nothing can go amiss, so long as he is at his ease,
-though a pain in his little finger makes him so peevish and quarrelsome,
-that nobody can come near him. Knavery and injustice in
-the abstract are things that by no means ruffle his temper, or alter
-the serenity of his countenance, unless he is to be the sufferer by
-them; nor is he ever betrayed into a passion in answering a sophism,
-if he does not think it immediately directed against his own interest.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On the contrary, we sometimes meet with persons who regularly
-heat themselves in an argument, and get out of humour on every
-occasion, and make themselves obnoxious to a whole company about
-nothing. This is not because they are ill-tempered, but because they
-are in earnest. Good-nature is a hypocrite: it tries to pass off its
-love of its own ease and indifference to everything else for a particular
-softness and mildness of disposition. All people get in a passion, and
-lose their temper, if you offer to strike them, or cheat them of their
-money, that is, if you interfere with that which they are really
-interested in. Tread on the heel of one of these good-natured persons,
-who do not care if the whole world is in flames, and see how he
-will bear it. If the truth were known, the most disagreeable people
-are the most amiable. They are the only persons who feel an interest
-in what does not concern them. They have as much regard for
-others as they have for themselves. They have as many vexations
-and causes of complaint as there are in the world. They are general
-righters of wrongs, and redressers of grievances. They not only are
-annoyed by what they can help, by an act of inhumanity done in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>next street, or in a neighbouring country by their own countrymen,
-they not only do not claim any share in the glory, and hate it the
-more, the more brilliant the success,—but a piece of injustice done
-three thousand years ago touches them to the quick. They have an
-unfortunate attachment to a set of abstract phrases, such as <em>liberty</em>,
-<em>truth</em>, <em>justice</em>, <em>humanity</em>, <em>honour</em>, which are continually abused by knaves,
-and misunderstood by fools, and they can hardly contain themselves
-for spleen. They have something to keep them in perpetual hot
-water. No sooner is one question set at rest than another rises up
-to perplex them. They wear themselves to the bone in the affairs
-of other people, to whom they can do no manner of service, to the
-neglect of their own business and pleasure. They tease themselves
-to death about the morality of the Turks, or the politics of the French.
-There are certain words that afflict their ears, and things that lacerate
-their souls, and remain a plague-spot there forever after. They have
-a fellow-feeling with all that has been done, said, or thought in the
-world. They have an interest in all science and in all art. They
-hate a lie as much as a wrong, for truth is the foundation of all justice.
-Truth is the first thing in their thoughts, then mankind, then their
-country, last themselves. They love excellence, and bow to fame,
-which is the shadow of it. Above all, they are anxious to see justice
-done to the dead, as the best encouragement to the living, and the
-lasting inheritance of future generations. They do not like to see
-a great principle undermined, or the fall of a great man. They would
-sooner forgive a blow in the face than a wanton attack on acknowledged
-reputation. The contempt in which the French hold Shakspeare
-is a serious evil to them; nor do they think the matter mended,
-when they hear an Englishman, who would be thought a profound
-one, say that Voltaire was a man without wit. They are vexed to
-see genius playing at Tom Fool, and honesty turned bawd. It gives
-them a cutting sensation to see a number of things which, as they are
-unpleasant to see, we shall not here repeat. In short, they have a
-passion for truth; they feel the same attachment to the idea of what
-is right, that a knave does to his interest, or that a good-natured man
-does to his ease; and they have as many sources of uneasiness as
-there are actual or supposed deviations from this standard in the sum
-of things, or as there is a possibility of folly and mischief in the world.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Principle is a passion for truth; an incorrigible attachment to a
-general proposition. Good-nature is humanity that costs nothing.
-No good-natured man was ever a martyr to a cause, in religion or
-politics. He has no idea of striving against the stream. He may
-become a good courtier and a loyal subject; and it is hard if he does
-not, for he has nothing to do in that case but to consult his ease,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>interest, and outward appearances. The Vicar of Bray was a good-natured
-man. What a pity he was but a vicar! A good-natured
-man is utterly unfit for any situation or office in life that requires
-integrity, fortitude, or generosity,—any sacrifice, except of opinion,
-or any exertion, but to please. A good-natured man will debauch
-his friend’s mistress, if he has an opportunity; and betray his friend,
-sooner than share disgrace or danger with him. He will not forego
-the smallest gratification to save the whole world. He makes his
-own convenience the standard of right and wrong. He avoids the
-feeling of pain in himself, and shuts his eyes to the sufferings of others.
-He will put a malefactor or an innocent person (no matter which) to
-the rack, and only laugh at the uncouthness of the gestures, or wonder
-that he is so unmannerly as to cry out. There is no villainy to which
-he will not lend a helping hand with great coolness and cordiality,
-for he sees only the pleasant and profitable side of things. He will
-assent to a falsehood with a leer of complacency, and applaud any
-atrocity that comes recommended in the garb of authority. He will
-betray his country to please a Minister, and sign the death-warrant
-of thousands of wretches, rather than forfeit the congenial smile, the
-well-known squeeze of the hand. The shrieks of death, the torture
-of mangled limbs, the last groans of despair, are things that shock his
-smooth humanity too much ever to make an impression on it: his
-good-nature sympathizes only with the smile, the bow, the gracious
-salutation, the fawning answer: vice loses its sting, and corruption
-its poison, in the oily gentleness of his disposition. He will not hear
-of any thing wrong in Church or State. He will defend every abuse
-by which any thing is to be got, every dirty job, every act of every
-Minister. In an extreme case, a very good-natured man indeed may
-try to hang twelve honester men than himself to rise at the Bar, and
-forge the seal of the realm to continue his colleagues a week longer
-in office. He is a slave to the will of others, a coward to their
-prejudices, a tool of their vices. A good-natured man is no more
-fit to be trusted in public affairs, than a coward or a woman is to lead
-an army. Spleen is the soul of patriotism and of public good. Lord
-Castlereagh is a good-natured man, Lord Eldon is a good-natured
-man, Charles Fox was a good-natured man. The last instance is
-the most decisive. The definition of a true patriot is <em>a good hater</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A king, who is a good-natured man, is in a fair way of being a great
-tyrant. A king ought to feel concern for all to whom his power
-extends; but a good-natured man cares only about himself. If he
-has a good appetite, eats and sleeps well, nothing in the universe
-besides can disturb him. The destruction of the lives or liberties
-of his subjects will not stop him in the least of his caprices, but will
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>concoct well with his bile, and ‘good digestion wait on appetite, and
-health on both.’ He will send out his mandate to kill and destroy
-with the same indifference or satisfaction that he performs any natural
-function of his body. The consequences are placed beyond the reach
-of his imagination, or would not affect him if they were not, for he
-is a fool, and good-natured. A good-natured man hates more than
-any one else whatever thwarts his will, or contradicts his prejudices;
-and if he has the power to prevent it, depend upon it, he will use it
-without remorse and without control.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There is a lower species of this character which is what is usually
-understood by a <em>well-meaning man</em>. A well-meaning man is one who
-often does a great deal of mischief without any kind of malice. He
-means no one any harm, if it is not for his interest. He is not a
-knave, nor perfectly honest. He does not easily resign a good place.
-Mr. Vansittart is a well-meaning man.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Irish are a good-natured people; they have many virtues,
-but their virtues are those of the heart, not of the head. In their
-passions and affections they are sincere, but they are hypocrites in
-understanding. If they once begin to calculate the consequences,
-self-interest prevails. An Irishman who trusts to his principles, and
-a Scotchman who yields to his impulses, are equally dangerous. The
-Irish have wit, genius, eloquence, imagination, affections: but they
-want coherence of understanding, and consequently have no standard
-of thought or action. Their strength of mind does not keep pace
-with the warmth of their feelings, or the quickness of their conceptions.
-Their animal spirits run away with them: their reason is a
-jade. There is something crude, indigested, rash, and discordant, in
-almost all that they do or say. They have no system, no abstract
-ideas. They are ‘everything by starts, and nothing long.’ They
-are a wild people. They hate whatever imposes a law on their
-understandings, or a yoke on their wills. To betray the principles
-they are most bound by their own professions and the expectations
-of others to maintain, is with them a reclamation of their original
-rights, and to fly in the face of their benefactors and friends, an
-assertion of their natural freedom of will. They want consistency
-and good faith. They unite fierceness with levity. In the midst
-of their headlong impulses, they have an under-current of selfishness
-and cunning, which in the end gets the better of them. Their
-feelings, when no longer excited by novelty or opposition, grow cold
-and stagnant. Their blood, if not heated by passion, turns to poison.
-They have a rancour in their hatred of any object they have abandoned,
-proportioned to the attachment they have professed to it. Their zeal,
-converted against itself, is furious. The late Mr. Burke was an
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>instance of an Irish patriot and philosopher. He abused metaphysics,
-because he could make nothing out of them, and turned his back upon
-liberty, when he found he could get nothing more by her.<a id='r59' /><a href='#f59' class='c012'><sup>[59]</sup></a>—See to
-the same purpose the winding up of the character of <em>Judy</em> in Miss
-Edgeworth’s <cite>Castle Rackrent</cite>.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>T. T.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>No. 28.</span>]&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; ON THE CHARACTER OF MILTON’S EVE&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; [<span class='sc'>July 21, 1816.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>The difference between the character of <em>Eve</em> in Milton and Shakspeare’s
-female characters is very striking, and it appears to us to be
-this: Milton describes <em>Eve</em> not only as full of love and tenderness
-for <em>Adam</em>, but as the constant object of admiration in herself. She
-is the idol of the poet’s imagination, and he paints her whole person
-with a studied profusion of charms. She is the wife, but she is still
-as much as ever the mistress, of <em>Adam</em>. She is represented, indeed,
-as devoted to her husband, as twining round him for support ‘as the
-vine curls her tendrils,’ but her own grace and beauty are never lost
-sight of in the picture of conjugal felicity. <em>Adam’s</em> attention and
-regard are as much turned to her as hers to him; for ‘in that first
-garden of their innocence,’ he had no other objects or pursuits to
-distract his attention; she was both his business and his pleasure.
-Shakspeare’s females, on the contrary, seem to exist only in their
-attachment to others. They are pure abstractions of the affections.
-Their features are not painted, nor the colour of their hair. Their
-hearts only are laid open. We are acquainted with <em>Imogen</em>, <em>Miranda</em>,
-<em>Ophelia</em>, or <em>Desdemona</em>, by what they thought and felt, but we
-cannot tell whether they were black, brown, or fair. But Milton’s
-<cite>Eve</cite> is all of ivory and gold. Shakspeare seldom tantalises the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>reader with a luxurious display of the personal charms of his heroines,
-with a curious inventory of particular beauties, except indirectly, and
-for some other purpose, as where <em>Jachimo</em> describes <em>Imogen</em> asleep,
-or the old men in the <cite>Winter’s Tale</cite> vie with each other in invidious
-praise of <em>Perdita</em>. Even in <em>Juliet</em>, the most voluptuous and glowing
-of the class of characters here spoken of, we are reminded chiefly
-of circumstances connected with the physiognomy of passion, as in
-her leaning with her cheek upon her arm, or which only convey the
-general impression of enthusiasm made on her lover’s brain. One
-thing may be said, that Shakspeare had not the same opportunities
-as Milton: for his women were clothed, and it cannot be denied that
-Milton took <em>Eve</em> at a considerable disadvantage in this respect. He
-has accordingly described her in all the loveliness of nature, tempting
-to sight as the fruit of the Hesperides guarded by that Dragon old,
-herself the fairest among the flowers of Paradise!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The figures both of <em>Adam</em> and <em>Eve</em> are very prominent in this
-poem. As there is little action in it, the interest is constantly kept
-up by the beauty and grandeur of the images. They are thus introduced:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Two of far nobler shape, erect and tall,</div>
- <div class='line'>Godlike erect, with native honour clad,</div>
- <div class='line'>In naked majesty seemed lords of all,</div>
- <div class='line'>And worthy seemed; for in their looks divine</div>
- <div class='line'>The image of their glorious Maker shone:</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in26'>——Though both</div>
- <div class='line'>Not equal, as their sex not equal seem’d;</div>
- <div class='line'>For contemplation he and valour form’d,</div>
- <div class='line'>For softness she and sweet attractive grace;</div>
- <div class='line'>He for God only, she for God in him.</div>
- <div class='line'>His fair large front and eye sublime declar’d</div>
- <div class='line'>Absolute rule; and hyacinthine locks</div>
- <div class='line'>Round from his parted forelock manly hung</div>
- <div class='line'>Clust’ring, but not beneath his shoulders broad;</div>
- <div class='line'>She as a veil down to the slender waist</div>
- <div class='line'>Her unadorned golden tresses wore</div>
- <div class='line'>Dishevell’d, but in wanton ringlets wav’d</div>
- <div class='line'>As the vine curls her tendrils, which implied</div>
- <div class='line'>Subjection, but required with gentle sway,</div>
- <div class='line'>And by her yielded, by him best receiv’d,</div>
- <div class='line'>Yielded with coy submission, modest pride,</div>
- <div class='line'>And sweet reluctant amorous delay.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'><em>Eve</em> is not only represented as beautiful, but with conscious beauty.
-Shakspeare’s heroines are almost insensible of their charms, and
-wound without knowing it. They are not coquets. If the salvation
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>of mankind had depended upon one of them, we don’t know—but the
-Devil might have been baulked. This is but a conjecture! <em>Eve</em> has
-a great idea of herself, and there is some difficulty in prevailing on her
-to quit her own image, the first time she discovers its reflection in
-the water. She gives the following account of herself to <em>Adam</em>:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘That day I oft remember, when from sleep</div>
- <div class='line'>I first awak’d, and found myself repos’d</div>
- <div class='line'>Under a shade on flow’rs, much wond’ring where</div>
- <div class='line'>And what I was, whence thither brought and how.</div>
- <div class='line'>Not distant far from thence a murmuring sound</div>
- <div class='line'>Of waters issued from a cave, and spread</div>
- <div class='line'>Into a liquid plain, then stood unmov’d</div>
- <div class='line'>Pure as the expanse of Heav’n; I thither went</div>
- <div class='line'>With unexperienc’d thought, and laid me down</div>
- <div class='line'>On the green bank, to look into the clear</div>
- <div class='line'>Smooth lake, that to me seem’d another sky.</div>
- <div class='line'>As I bent down to look, just opposite</div>
- <div class='line'>A shape within the watery gleam appear’d,</div>
- <div class='line'>Bending to look on me; I started back,</div>
- <div class='line'>It started back; but pleas’d I soon return’d,</div>
- <div class='line'>Pleas’d it return’d as soon with answ’ring looks</div>
- <div class='line'>Of sympathy and love.’...</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The poet afterwards adds:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘So spake our general mother, and with eyes</div>
- <div class='line'>Of conjugal attraction unreprov’d,</div>
- <div class='line'>And meek surrender, half-embracing lean’d</div>
- <div class='line'>On our first father; half her swelling breast</div>
- <div class='line'>Naked met his under the flowing gold</div>
- <div class='line'>Of her loose tresses hid: he in delight</div>
- <div class='line'>Both of her beauty and submissive charms;</div>
- <div class='line'>Smil’d with superior love, as Jupiter</div>
- <div class='line'>On Juno smiles, when he impregns the clouds</div>
- <div class='line'>That shed May flowers.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The same thought is repeated with greater simplicity, and perhaps
-even beauty, in the beginning of the Fifth Book:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in18'>——‘So much the more</div>
- <div class='line'>His wonder was to find unawaken’d Eve</div>
- <div class='line'>With tresses discompos’d and glowing cheek,</div>
- <div class='line'>As through unquiet rest: he on his side</div>
- <div class='line'>Leaning half-rais’d, with looks of cordial love</div>
- <div class='line'>Hung over her enamour’d, and beheld</div>
- <div class='line'>Beauty, which whether waking or asleep</div>
- <div class='line'>Shot forth peculiar graces; then, with voice</div>
- <div class='line'>Mild, as when Zephyrus on Flora breathes,</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>Her hand soft touching, whisper’d thus. Awake</div>
- <div class='line'>My fairest, my espous’d, my latest found,</div>
- <div class='line'>Heav’n’s last best gift, my ever new delight,</div>
- <div class='line'>Awake’....</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The general style, indeed, in which <em>Eve</em> is addressed by <em>Adam</em>,
-or described by the poet, is in the highest strain of compliment:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘When Adam thus to Eve. Fair consort, the hour</div>
- <div class='line'>Of night approaches.’...</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘To whom thus Eve, with perfect beauty adorn’d.’</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘To whom our general ancestor replied,</div>
- <div class='line'>Daughter of God and Man, accomplish’d Eve.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'><em>Eve</em> is herself so well convinced that these epithets are her due, that
-the idea follows her in her sleep, and she dreams of herself as the
-paragon of nature, the wonder of the universe:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in22'>——‘Methought</div>
- <div class='line'>Close at mine ear one call’d me forth to walk,</div>
- <div class='line'>With gentle voice, I thought it thine; it said,</div>
- <div class='line'>Why sleep’st thou, Eve? Now is the pleasant time,</div>
- <div class='line'>The cool, the silent, save where silence yields</div>
- <div class='line'>To the night-warbling bird, that now awake</div>
- <div class='line'>Tunes sweetest his love-labour’d song; now reigns</div>
- <div class='line'>Full-orb’d the moon, and with more pleasing light</div>
- <div class='line'>Shadowy sets off the face of things; in vain,</div>
- <div class='line'>If none regard; Heav’n wakes with all his eyes,</div>
- <div class='line'>Whom to behold but thee, Nature’s desire?</div>
- <div class='line'>In whose sight all things joy, with ravishment</div>
- <div class='line'>Attracted by thy beauty still to gaze.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>This is the very topic, too, on which the Serpent afterwards
-enlarges with so much artful insinuation and fatal confidence of
-success. ‘So talked the spirited sly snake.’ The conclusion of the
-foregoing scene, in which <em>Eve</em> relates her dream and <em>Adam</em> comforts
-her, is such an exquisite piece of description, that, though not to our
-immediate purpose, we cannot refrain from quoting it:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘So cheer’d he his fair spouse, and she was cheer’d;</div>
- <div class='line'>But silently a gentle tear let fall</div>
- <div class='line'>From either eye, and wip’d them with her hair;</div>
- <div class='line'>Two other precious drops that ready stood,</div>
- <div class='line'>Each in their crystal sluice, he ere they fell</div>
- <div class='line'>Kiss’d, as the gracious signs of sweet remorse</div>
- <div class='line'>And pious awe, that fear’d to have offended.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>The formal eulogy on <em>Eve</em> which <em>Adam</em> addresses to the Angel,
-in giving an account of his own creation and hers, is full of elaborate
-grace:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Under his forming hands a creature grew,</div>
- <div class='line'>.&#8196; &#8196; .&#8196; &#8196; .&#8196; &#8196; .&#8196; &#8196; .&#8196; &#8196; so lovely fair,</div>
- <div class='line'>That what seem’d fair in all the world, seem’d now</div>
- <div class='line'>Mean, or in her summ’d up, in her contained</div>
- <div class='line'>And in her looks, which from that time infus’d</div>
- <div class='line'>Sweetness into my heart, unfelt before,</div>
- <div class='line'>And into all things from her air inspir’d</div>
- <div class='line'>The spirit of love and amorous delight.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>That which distinguishes Milton from the other poets, who have
-pampered the eye and fed the imagination with exuberant descriptions
-of female beauty, is the moral severity with which he has tempered
-them. There is not a line in his works which tends to licentiousness,
-or the impression of which, if it has such a tendency, is not
-effectually checked by thought and sentiment. The following are
-two remarkable instances:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in16'>——‘In shadier bower</div>
- <div class='line'>More secret and sequester’d, though but feign’d,</div>
- <div class='line'>Pan or Sylvanus never slept, nor Nymph,</div>
- <div class='line'>Nor Faunus haunted. Here in close recess,</div>
- <div class='line'>With flowers, garlands, and sweet-smelling herbs,</div>
- <div class='line'>Espoused Eve deck’d first her nuptial bed,</div>
- <div class='line'>And heavenly quires the hymenœan sung,</div>
- <div class='line'>What day the genial Angel to our sire</div>
- <div class='line'>Brought her in naked beauty more adorn’d,</div>
- <div class='line'>More lovely than Pandora, whom the Gods</div>
- <div class='line'>Endow’d with all their gifts, and O too like</div>
- <div class='line'>In sad event, when to th’ unwiser son</div>
- <div class='line'>Of Japhet brought by Hermes, she ensnar’d</div>
- <div class='line'>Mankind by her fair looks, to be aveng’d</div>
- <div class='line'>On him who had stole Jove’s authentic fire.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The other is a passage of extreme beauty and pathos blended. It
-is the one in which the Angel is described as the guest of our first
-ancestors:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in16'>——‘Meanwhile at table Eve</div>
- <div class='line'>Minister’d naked, and their flowing cups</div>
- <div class='line'>With pleasant liquors crown’d: O innocence</div>
- <div class='line'>Deserving Paradise! if ever, then,</div>
- <div class='line'>Then had the sons of God excuse to have been</div>
- <div class='line'>Enamour’d at that sight; but in those hearts</div>
- <div class='line'>Love unlibidinous reigned, nor jealousy</div>
- <div class='line'>Was understood, the injur’d lover’s Hell.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>The character which a living poet has given of Spenser, would be
-much more true of Milton:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in12'>——‘Yet not more sweet</div>
- <div class='line'>Than pure was he, and not more pure than wise;</div>
- <div class='line'>High Priest of all the Muses’ mysteries.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Spenser, on the contrary, is very apt to pry into mysteries which
-do not belong to the Muses. Milton’s voluptuousness is not lascivious
-or sensual. He describes beautiful objects for their own sakes.
-Spenser has an eye to the consequences, and steeps everything in
-pleasure, often not of the purest kind. The want of passion has been
-brought as an objection against Milton, and his <cite>Adam</cite> and <em>Eve</em> have
-been considered as rather insipid personages, wrapped up in one
-another, and who excite but little sympathy in any one else. We do
-not feel this objection ourselves: we are content to be spectators in
-such scenes, without any other excitement. In general, the interest in
-Milton is essentially epic, and not dramatic; and the difference
-between the epic and the dramatic is this, that in the former the
-imagination produces the passion, and in the latter the passion produces
-the imagination. The interest of epic poetry arises from the
-contemplation of certain objects in themselves grand and beautiful: the
-interest of dramatic poetry from sympathy with the passions and
-pursuits of others; that is, from the practical relations of certain
-persons to certain objects, as depending on accident or will.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Pyramids of Egypt are epic objects; the imagination of them
-is necessarily attended with passion; but they have no dramatic
-interest, till circumstances connect them with some human catastrophe.
-Now, a poem might be constructed almost entirely of such images, of
-the highest intellectual passion, with little dramatic interest; and it
-is in this way that Milton has in a great measure constructed his
-poem. That is not its fault, but its excellence. The fault is in
-those who have no idea but of one kind of interest. But this question
-would lead to a longer discussion than we have room for at present.
-We shall conclude these extracts from Milton with two passages,
-which have always appeared to us to be highly affecting, and to
-contain a fine discrimination of character:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘O unexpected stroke, worse than of Death!</div>
- <div class='line'>Must I thus leave thee, Paradise? thus leave</div>
- <div class='line'>Thee, native soil, these happy walks and shades,</div>
- <div class='line'>Fit haunt of Gods? Where I had hope to spend,</div>
- <div class='line'>Quiet, though sad, the respite of that day</div>
- <div class='line'>That must be mortal to us both? O flowers,</div>
- <div class='line'>That never will in other climate grow,</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>My early visitation and my last</div>
- <div class='line'>At even, which I bred up with tender hand</div>
- <div class='line'>From the first opening bud, and gave ye names,</div>
- <div class='line'>Who now shall rear ye to the sun, or rank</div>
- <div class='line'>Your tribes, and water from th’ ambrosial fount?</div>
- <div class='line'>Thee, lastly, nuptial bow’r, by me adorn’d</div>
- <div class='line'>With what to sight or smell was sweet, from thee</div>
- <div class='line'>How shall I part, and whither wander down</div>
- <div class='line'>Into a lower world, to this obscure</div>
- <div class='line'>And wild? how shall we breathe in other air</div>
- <div class='line'>Less pure, accustom’d to immortal fruits?’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>This is the lamentation of <em>Eve</em> on being driven out of Paradise.
-Adam’s reflections are in a different strain, and still finer. After
-expressing his submission to the will of his Maker, he says:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘This most afflicts me, that departing hence</div>
- <div class='line'>As from his face I shall be hid, depriv’d</div>
- <div class='line'>His blessed countenance; here I could frequent</div>
- <div class='line'>With worship place by place where he vouchsaf’d</div>
- <div class='line'>Presence divine, and to my sons relate,</div>
- <div class='line'>On this mount he appeared, under this tree</div>
- <div class='line'>Stood visible, among these pines his voice</div>
- <div class='line'>I heard, here with him at this fountain talk’d:</div>
- <div class='line'>So many grateful altars I would rear</div>
- <div class='line'>Of grassy turf, and pile up every stone</div>
- <div class='line'>Of lustre from the brook, in memory</div>
- <div class='line'>Or monument to ages, and thereon</div>
- <div class='line'>Offer sweet-smelling gums and fruits and flow’rs:</div>
- <div class='line'>In yonder nether world where shall I seek</div>
- <div class='line'>His bright appearances or footstep trace?</div>
- <div class='line'>For though I fled him angry, yet recall’d</div>
- <div class='line'>To life prolong’d and promis’d race, I now</div>
- <div class='line'>Gladly behold though but his utmost skirts</div>
- <div class='line'>Of glory, and far off his steps adore.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>W. H.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>No. 29.</span>]&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; OBSERVATIONS ON MR. WORDSWORTH’S POEM THE EXCURSION&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; [<span class='sc'>Aug. 21, 28, 1814.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>The poem of The <cite>Excursion</cite> resembles that part of the country in
-which the scene is laid. It has the same vastness and magnificence,
-with the same nakedness and confusion. It has the same overwhelming,
-oppressive power. It excites or recalls the same sensations
-which those who have traversed that wonderful scenery must have
-felt. We are surrounded with the constant sense and superstitious
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>awe of the collective power of matter, of the gigantic and eternal
-forms of nature, on which, from the beginning of time, the hand of
-man has made no impression. Here are no dotted lines, no hedge-row
-beauties, no box-tree borders, no gravel walks, no square mechanic
-inclosures; all is left loose and irregular in the rude chaos of aboriginal
-nature. The boundaries of hill and valley are the poet’s only geography,
-where we wander with him incessantly over deep beds of
-moss and waving fern, amidst the troops of red-deer and wild animals.
-Such is the severe simplicity of Mr. Wordsworth’s taste, that we
-doubt whether he would not reject a druidical temple, or time-hallowed
-ruin as too modern and artificial for his purpose. He only familiarises
-himself or his readers with a stone, covered with lichens, which has
-slept in the same spot of ground from the creation of the world, or
-with the rocky fissure between two mountains caused by thunder, or
-with a cavern scooped out by the sea. His mind is, as it were,
-coëval with the primary forms of things; his imagination holds
-immediately from nature, and ‘owes no allegiance’ but ‘to the
-elements.’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The <cite>Excursion</cite> may be considered as a philosophical pastoral poem,—as
-a scholastic romance. It is less a poem on the country, than on
-the love of the country. It is not so much a description of natural
-objects, as of the feelings associated with them; not an account of
-the manners of rural life, but the result of the poet’s reflections on it.
-He does not present the reader with a lively succession of images or
-incidents, but paints the outgoings of his own heart, the shapings of
-his own fancy. He may be said to create his own materials; his
-thoughts are his real subject. His understanding broods over that
-which is ‘without form and void,’ and ‘makes it pregnant.’ He
-sees all things in himself. He hardly ever avails himself of remarkable
-objects or situations, but, in general, rejects them as interfering
-with the workings of his own mind, as disturbing the smooth, deep,
-majestic current of his own feelings. Thus his descriptions of natural
-scenery are not brought home distinctly to the naked eye by forms
-and circumstances, but every object is seen through the medium of
-innumerable recollections, is clothed with the haze of imagination
-like a glittering vapour, is obscured with the excess of glory, has the
-shadowy brightness of a waking dream. The image is lost in the
-sentiment, as sound in the multiplication of echoes.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘And visions, as prophetic eyes avow,</div>
- <div class='line'>Hang on each leaf, and cling to every bough.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>In describing human nature, Mr. Wordsworth equally shuns the
-common ‘vantage-grounds of popular story, of striking incident, or
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>fatal catastrophe, as cheap and vulgar modes of producing an effect.
-He scans the human race as the naturalist measures the earth’s zone,
-without attending to the picturesque points of view, the abrupt inequalities
-of surface. He contemplates the passions and habits of
-men, not in their extremes, but in their first elements; their follies
-and vices, not at their height, with all their embossed evils upon their
-heads, but as lurking in embryo,—the seeds of the disorder inwoven
-with our very constitution. He only sympathises with those simple
-forms of feeling, which mingle at once with his own identity, or with
-the stream of general humanity. To him the great and the small
-are the same; the near and the remote; what appears, and what
-only is. The general and the permanent, like the Platonic ideas, are
-his only realities. All accidental varieties and individual contrasts
-are lost in an endless continuity of feeling, like drops of water in the
-ocean-stream! An intense intellectual egotism swallows up every
-thing. Even the dialogues introduced in the present volume are
-soliloquies of the same character, taking different views of the subject.
-The recluse, the pastor, and the pedlar, are three persons in one poet.
-We ourselves disapprove of these ‘interlocutions between Lucius and
-Caius’ as impertinent babbling, where there is no dramatic distinction
-of character. But the evident scope and tendency of Mr. Wordsworth’s
-mind is the reverse of dramatic. It resists all change of
-character, all variety of scenery, all the bustle, machinery, and pantomime
-of the stage, or of real life,—whatever might relieve, or relax,
-or change the direction of its own activity, jealous of all competition.
-The power of his mind preys upon itself. It is as if there were
-nothing but himself and the universe. He lives in the busy solitude
-of his own heart; in the deep silence of thought. His imagination
-lends life and feeling only to ‘the bare trees and mountains bare’;
-peoples the viewless tracts of air, and converses with the silent clouds!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>We could have wished that our author had given to his work the
-form of a didactic poem altogether, with only occasional digressions
-or allusions to particular instances. But he has chosen to encumber
-himself with a load of narrative and description, which sometimes
-hinders the progress and effect of the general reasoning, and which,
-instead of being inwoven with the text, would have come in better
-in plain prose as notes at the end of the volume. Mr. Wordsworth,
-indeed, says finely, and perhaps as truly as finely:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Exchange the shepherd’s frock of native grey</div>
- <div class='line'>For robes with regal purple tinged; convert</div>
- <div class='line'>The crook into a sceptre; give the pomp</div>
- <div class='line'>Of circumstance; and here the tragic Muse</div>
- <div class='line'>Shall find apt subjects for her highest art.</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>Amid the groves, beneath the shadowy hills,</div>
- <div class='line'>The generations are prepared; the pangs,</div>
- <div class='line'>The internal pangs, are ready; the dread strife</div>
- <div class='line'>Of poor humanity’s afflicted will</div>
- <div class='line'>Struggling in vain with ruthless destiny.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>But he immediately declines availing himself of these resources of
-the rustic moralist: for the priest, who officiates as ‘the sad historian
-of the pensive plain’ says in reply:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Our system is not fashioned to preclude</div>
- <div class='line'>That sympathy which you for others ask:</div>
- <div class='line'>And I could tell, not travelling for my theme</div>
- <div class='line'>Beyond the limits of these humble graves,</div>
- <div class='line'>Of strange disasters; but I pass them by,</div>
- <div class='line'>Loth to disturb what Heaven hath hushed to peace.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>There is, in fact, in Mr. Wordsworth’s mind an evident repugnance
-to admit anything that tells for itself, without the interpretation
-of the poet,—a fastidious antipathy to immediate effect,—a systematic
-unwillingness to share the palm with his subject. Where, however,
-he has a subject presented to him, ‘such as the meeting soul may
-pierce,’ and to which he does not grudge to lend the aid of his fine
-genius, his powers of description and fancy seem to be little inferior
-to those of his classical predecessor, Akenside. Among several
-others which we might select we give the following passage, describing
-the religion of ancient Greece:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘In that fair clime, the lonely herdsman, stretch’d</div>
- <div class='line'>On the soft grass through half a summer’s day,</div>
- <div class='line'>With music lulled his indolent repose:</div>
- <div class='line'>And in some fit of weariness, if he,</div>
- <div class='line'>When his own breath was silent, chanced to hear</div>
- <div class='line'>A distant strain, far sweeter than the sounds</div>
- <div class='line'>Which his poor skill could make, his fancy fetch’d,</div>
- <div class='line'>Even from the blazing chariot of the sun,</div>
- <div class='line'>A beardless youth, who touched a golden lute,</div>
- <div class='line'>And filled the illumined groves with ravishment.</div>
- <div class='line'>The nightly hunter, lifting up his eyes</div>
- <div class='line'>Towards the crescent moon, with grateful heart</div>
- <div class='line'>Called on the lovely wanderer, who bestowed</div>
- <div class='line'>That timely light, to share his joyous sport:</div>
- <div class='line'>And hence, a beaming Goddess with her Nymphs</div>
- <div class='line'>Across the lawn and through the darksome grove,</div>
- <div class='line'>(Nor unaccompanied with tuneful notes</div>
- <div class='line'>By echo multiplied from rock or cave),</div>
- <div class='line'>Swept in the storm of chase, as moon and stars</div>
- <div class='line'>Glance rapidly along the clouded heavens,</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>When winds are blowing strong. The traveller slaked</div>
- <div class='line'>His thirst from rill, or gushing fount, and thanked</div>
- <div class='line'>The Naiad. Sun beams, upon distant hills</div>
- <div class='line'>Gliding apace, with shadows in their train,</div>
- <div class='line'>Might, with small help from fancy, be transformed</div>
- <div class='line'>Into fleet Oreads, sporting visibly.</div>
- <div class='line'>The zephyrs fanning as they passed their wings</div>
- <div class='line'>Lacked not for love fair objects, whom they wooed</div>
- <div class='line'>With gentle whisper. Withered boughs grotesque,</div>
- <div class='line'>Stripped of their leaves and twigs by hoary age,</div>
- <div class='line'>From depth of shaggy covert peeping forth</div>
- <div class='line'>In the low vale, or on steep mountain side:</div>
- <div class='line'>And sometimes intermixed with stirring horns</div>
- <div class='line'>Of the live deer, or goat’s depending beard;</div>
- <div class='line'>These were the lurking satyrs, a wild brood</div>
- <div class='line'>Of gamesome Deities! or Pan himself,</div>
- <div class='line'>The simple shepherd’s awe-inspiring God.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The foregoing is one of a succession of splendid passages equally
-enriched with philosophy and poetry, tracing the fictions of Eastern
-mythology to the immediate intercourse of the imagination with
-Nature, and to the habitual propensity of the human mind to endow
-the outward forms of being with life and conscious motion. With
-this expansive and animating principle, Mr. Wordsworth has forcibly,
-but somewhat severely, contrasted the cold, narrow, lifeless spirit of
-modern philosophy:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘How, shall our great discoverers obtain</div>
- <div class='line'>From sense and reason less than these obtained,</div>
- <div class='line'>Though far misled? Shall men for whom our age</div>
- <div class='line'>Unbaffled powers of vision hath prepared,</div>
- <div class='line'>To explore the world without and world within,</div>
- <div class='line'>Be joyless as the blind? Ambitious souls—</div>
- <div class='line'>Whom earth at this late season hath produced</div>
- <div class='line'>To regulate the moving spheres, and weigh</div>
- <div class='line'>The planets in the hollow of their hand;</div>
- <div class='line'>And they who rather dive than soar, whose pains</div>
- <div class='line'>Have solved the elements, or analysed</div>
- <div class='line'>The thinking principle—shall they in fact</div>
- <div class='line'>Prove a degraded race? And what avails</div>
- <div class='line'>Renown, if their presumption make them such?</div>
- <div class='line'>Inquire of ancient wisdom; go, demand</div>
- <div class='line'>Of mighty nature, if ’twas ever meant</div>
- <div class='line'>That we should pry far off, yet be unraised;</div>
- <div class='line'>That we should pore, and dwindle as we pore,</div>
- <div class='line'>Viewing all objects unremittingly</div>
- <div class='line'>In disconnection dead and spiritless;</div>
- <div class='line'>And still dividing and dividing still</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span>Break down all grandeur, still unsatisfied</div>
- <div class='line'>With the perverse attempt, while littleness</div>
- <div class='line'>May yet become more little; waging thus</div>
- <div class='line'>An impious warfare with the very life</div>
- <div class='line'>Of our own souls! And if indeed there be</div>
- <div class='line'>An all-pervading spirit, upon whom</div>
- <div class='line'>Our dark foundations rest, could he design,</div>
- <div class='line'>That this magnificent effect of power,</div>
- <div class='line'>The earth we tread, the sky which we behold</div>
- <div class='line'>By day, and all the pomp which night reveals,</div>
- <div class='line'>That these—and that superior mystery,</div>
- <div class='line'>Our vital frame, so fearfully devised,</div>
- <div class='line'>And the dread soul within it—should exist</div>
- <div class='line'>Only to be examined, pondered, searched,</div>
- <div class='line'>Probed, vexed, and criticised—to be prized</div>
- <div class='line'>No more than as a mirror that reflects</div>
- <div class='line'>To proud Self-love her own intelligence?’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>From the chemists and metaphysicians our author turns to the
-laughing sage of France, Voltaire. ‘Poor gentleman, it fares no
-better with him, for he’s a wit.’ We cannot, however, agree with
-Mr. Wordsworth that <cite>Candide</cite> is <em>dull</em>. It is, if our author pleases,
-‘the production of a scoffer’s pen,’ or it is any thing but dull. It
-may not be proper in a grave, discreet, orthodox, promising young
-divine, who studies his opinions in the contraction or distension of his
-patron’s brow, to allow any merit to a work like <cite>Candide</cite>; but we
-conceive that it would have been more manly in Mr. Wordsworth,
-nor do we think it would have hurt the cause he espouses, if he had
-blotted out the epithet, after it had peevishly escaped him. Whatsoever
-savours of a little, narrow, inquisitorial spirit, does not sit well
-on a poet and a man of genius. The prejudices of a philosopher are
-not natural. There is a frankness and sincerity of opinion, which is
-a paramount obligation in all questions of intellect, though it may not
-govern the decisions of the spiritual courts, who may, however, be
-safely left to take care of their own interests. There is a plain
-directness and simplicity of understanding, which is the only security
-against the evils of levity, on the one hand, or of hypocrisy on the
-other. A speculative bigot is a solecism in the intellectual world.
-We can assure Mr. Wordsworth, that we should not have bestowed
-so much serious consideration on a single voluntary perversion of
-language, but that our respect for his character makes us jealous of
-his smallest faults!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>With regard to his general philippic against the contractedness
-and egotism of philosophical pursuits, we only object to its not being
-carried further. We shall not affirm with Rousseau (his authority
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>would perhaps have little weight with Mr. Wordsworth)—‘<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Tout
-homme reflechi est mechant</span></i>‘; but we conceive that the same reasoning
-which Mr. Wordsworth applies so eloquently and justly to the
-natural philosopher and metaphysician may be extended to the
-moralist, the divine, the politician, the orator, the artist, and even
-the poet. And why so? Because wherever an intense activity is
-given to any one faculty, it necessarily prevents the due and natural
-exercise of others. Hence all those professions or pursuits, where
-the mind is exclusively occupied with the ideas of things as they
-exist in the imagination or understanding, as they call for the exercise
-of intellectual activity, and not as they are connected with
-practical good or evil, must check the genial expansion of the moral
-sentiments and social affections; must lead to a cold and dry abstraction,
-as they are found to suspend the animal functions, and relax the
-bodily frame. Hence the complaint of the want of natural sensibility
-and constitutional warmth of attachment in those persons who have
-been devoted to the pursuit of any art or science,—of their restless
-morbidity of temperament, and indifference to every thing that does not
-furnish an occasion for the display of their mental superiority and the
-gratification of their vanity. The philosophical poet himself, perhaps,
-owes some of his love of nature to the opportunity it affords him of
-analyzing his own feelings, and contemplating his own powers,—of
-making every object about him a whole length mirror to reflect his
-favourite thoughts, and of looking down on the frailties of others in
-undisturbed leisure, and from a more dignified height.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>One of the most interesting parts of this work is that in which the
-author treats of the French Revolution, and of the feelings connected
-with it, in ingenuous minds, in its commencement and its progress.
-The <em>solitary</em>,<a id='r60' /><a href='#f60' class='c012'><sup>[60]</sup></a> who, by domestic calamities and disappointments, had
-been cut off from society, and almost from himself, gives the
-following account of the manner in which he was roused from his
-melancholy:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘From that abstraction I was roused—and how?</div>
- <div class='line'>Even as a thoughtful shepherd by a flash</div>
- <div class='line'>Of lightning, startled in a gloomy cave</div>
- <div class='line'>Of these wild hills. For, lo! the dread Bastile,</div>
- <div class='line'>With all the chambers in its horrid towers,</div>
- <div class='line'>Fell to the ground: by violence o’erthrown</div>
- <div class='line'>Of indignation; and with shouts that drowned</div>
- <div class='line'>The crash it made in falling! From the wreck</div>
- <div class='line'>A golden palace rose, or seemed to rise,</div>
- <div class='line'>The appointed seat of equitable law</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>And mild paternal sway. The potent shock</div>
- <div class='line'>I felt; the transformation I perceived,</div>
- <div class='line'>As marvellously seized as in that moment,</div>
- <div class='line'>When, from the blind mist issuing, I beheld</div>
- <div class='line'>Glory—beyond all glory ever seen,</div>
- <div class='line'>Dazzling the soul! Meanwhile prophetic harps</div>
- <div class='line'>In every grove were ringing, “War shall cease:</div>
- <div class='line'>Did ye not hear that conquest is abjured?</div>
- <div class='line'>Bring garlands, bring forth choicest flowers, to deck</div>
- <div class='line'>The tree of liberty!”—My heart rebounded:</div>
- <div class='line'>My melancholy voice the chorus joined.</div>
- <div class='line'>Thus was I reconverted to the world;</div>
- <div class='line'>Society became my glittering bride,</div>
- <div class='line'>And airy hopes my children. From the depths</div>
- <div class='line'>Of natural passion seemingly escaped,</div>
- <div class='line'>My soul diffused itself in wide embrace</div>
- <div class='line'>Of institutions and the forms of things.</div>
- <div class='line in30'>——If with noise</div>
- <div class='line'>And acclamation, crowds in open air</div>
- <div class='line'>Expressed the tumult of their minds, my voice</div>
- <div class='line'>There mingled, heard or not. And in still groves,</div>
- <div class='line'>Where wild enthusiasts tuned a pensive lay</div>
- <div class='line'>Of thanks and expectation, in accord</div>
- <div class='line'>With their belief, I sang Saturnian rule</div>
- <div class='line'>Returned—a progeny of golden years</div>
- <div class='line'>Permitted to descend, and bless mankind.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Scorn and contempt forbid me to proceed!</div>
- <div class='line'>But history, time’s slavish scribe, will tell</div>
- <div class='line'>How rapidly the zealots of the cause</div>
- <div class='line'>Disbanded—or in hostile ranks appeared:</div>
- <div class='line'>Some, tired of honest service; these outdone,</div>
- <div class='line'>Disgusted, therefore, or appalled by aims</div>
- <div class='line'>Of fiercer zealots. So confusion reigned,</div>
- <div class='line'>And the more faithful were compelled to exclaim,</div>
- <div class='line'>As Brutus did to virtue, “Liberty,</div>
- <div class='line'>I worshipped thee, and find thee but a shade!”</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Such recantation had for me no charm,</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Nor would I bend to it.</span>’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The subject is afterwards resumed, with the same magnanimity
-and philosophical firmness:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in22'>——‘For that other loss,</div>
- <div class='line'>The loss of confidence in social man,</div>
- <div class='line'>By the unexpected transports of our age</div>
- <div class='line'>Carried so high, that every thought which looked</div>
- <div class='line'>Beyond the temporal destiny of the kind—</div>
- <div class='line'>To many seemed superfluous; as no cause</div>
- <div class='line'>For such exalted confidence could e’er</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>Exist; so, none is now for such despair.</div>
- <div class='line'>The two extremes are equally remote</div>
- <div class='line'>From truth and reason; do not, then, confound</div>
- <div class='line'>One with the other, but reject them both;</div>
- <div class='line'>And choose the middle point, whereon to build</div>
- <div class='line'>Sound expectations. This doth he advise</div>
- <div class='line'>Who shared at first the illusion. At this day,</div>
- <div class='line'>When a Tartarian darkness overspreads</div>
- <div class='line'>The groaning nations; when the impious rule,</div>
- <div class='line'>By will or by established ordinance,</div>
- <div class='line'>Their own dire agents, and constrain the good</div>
- <div class='line'>To acts which they abhor; though I bewail</div>
- <div class='line'>This triumph, yet the pity of my heart</div>
- <div class='line'>Prevents me not from owning that the law,</div>
- <div class='line'>By which mankind now suffers, is most just.</div>
- <div class='line'>For by superior energies; more strict</div>
- <div class='line'>Affiance in each other; faith more firm</div>
- <div class='line'>In their unhallowed principles, the bad</div>
- <div class='line'>Have fairly earned a victory o’er the weak,</div>
- <div class='line'>The vacillating, inconsistent good.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the application of these memorable lines, we should, perhaps,
-differ a little from Mr. Wordsworth; nor can we indulge with him
-in the fond conclusion afterwards hinted at, that one day <em>our</em> triumph,
-the triumph of humanity and liberty, may be complete. For this
-purpose, we think several things necessary which are impossible. It
-is a consummation which cannot happen till the nature of things is
-changed, till the many become as united as the <em>one</em>, till romantic
-generosity shall be as common as gross selfishness, till reason shall
-have acquired the obstinate blindness of prejudice, till the love of
-power and of change shall no longer goad man on to restless action,
-till passion and will, hope and fear, love and hatred, and the objects
-proper to excite them, that is, alternate good and evil, shall no longer
-sway the bosoms and businesses of men. All things move, not in
-progress, but in a ceaseless round; our strength lies in our weakness;
-our virtues are built on our vices; our faculties are as limited as our
-being; nor can we lift man above his nature more than above the
-earth he treads. But though we cannot weave over again the airy,
-unsubstantial dream, which reason and experience have dispelled,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘What though the radiance, which was once so bright,</div>
- <div class='line'>Be now for ever taken from our sight,</div>
- <div class='line'>Though nothing can bring back the hour</div>
- <div class='line'>Of glory in the grass, of splendour in the flower’:—</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>yet we will never cease, nor be prevented from returning on the
-wings of imagination to that bright dream of our youth; that glad
-dawn of the day-star of liberty; that spring-time of the world, in which
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>the hopes and expectations of the human race seemed opening in the
-same gay career with our own; when France called her children to
-partake her equal blessings beneath her laughing skies; when the
-stranger was met in all her villages with dance and festive songs, in
-celebration of a new and golden era; and when, to the retired and
-contemplative student, the prospects of human happiness and glory
-were seen ascending like the steps of Jacob’s ladder, in bright and
-never-ending succession. The dawn of that day was suddenly overcast;
-that season of hope is past; it is fled with the other dreams of
-our youth, which we cannot recal, but has left behind it traces, which
-are not to be effaced by Birth-day and Thanks-giving odes, or the
-chaunting of <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Te Deums</span></i> in all the churches of Christendom. To
-those hopes eternal regrets are due; to those who maliciously and
-wilfully blasted them, in the fear that they might be accomplished, we
-feel no less what we owe—hatred and scorn as lasting!</p>
-
-<h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>No. 30.</span>]&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; THE SAME SUBJECT CONTINUED&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; [<span class='sc'>Oct. 2, 1814.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>Mr. Wordsworth’s writings exhibit all the internal power, without
-the external form of poetry. He has scarcely any of the pomp and
-decoration and scenic effect of poetry: no gorgeous palaces nor solemn
-temples awe the imagination; no cities rise ‘with glistering spires and
-pinnacles adorned’; we meet with no knights pricked forth on airy
-steeds; no hair-breadth ‘scapes and perilous accidents by flood or field.
-Either from the predominant habit of his mind not requiring the
-stimulus of outward impressions, or from the want of an imagination
-teeming with various forms, he takes the common every-day events
-and objects of nature, or rather seeks those that are the most simple
-and barren of effect; but he adds to them a weight of interest from
-the resources of his own mind, which makes the most insignificant
-things serious and even formidable. All other interests are absorbed
-in the deeper interest of his own thoughts, and find the same level.
-His mind magnifies the littleness of his subject, and raises its meanness;
-lends it his strength, and clothes it with borrowed grandeur. With
-him, a mole-hill, covered with wild thyme, assumes the importance of
-‘the great vision of the guarded mount’: a puddle is filled with
-preternatural faces, and agitated with the fiercest storms of passion.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The extreme simplicity which some persons have objected to in
-Mr. Wordsworth’s poetry, is to be found only in the subject and the
-style: the sentiments are subtle and profound. In the latter respect,
-his poetry is as much above the common standard or capacity, as in the
-other it is below it. His poems bear a distant resemblance to some
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>of Rembrandt’s landscapes, who, more than any other painter, created
-the medium through which he saw nature, and out of the stump of
-an old tree, a break in the sky, and a bit of water, could produce an
-effect almost miraculous.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mr. Wordsworth’s poems in general are the history of a refined
-and contemplative mind, conversant only with itself and nature. An
-intense feeling of the associations of this kind is the peculiar and
-characteristic feature of all his productions. He has described the
-love of nature better than any other poet. This sentiment, inly felt
-in all its force, and sometimes carried to an excess, is the source both
-of his strength and of his weakness. However we may sympathise
-with Mr. Wordsworth in his attachment to groves and fields, we
-cannot extend the same admiration to their inhabitants, or to the
-manners of country life in general. We go along with him, while he
-is the subject of his own narrative, but we take leave of him when he
-makes pedlars and ploughmen his heroes and the interpreters of his
-sentiments. It is, we think, getting into low company, and company,
-besides, that we do not like. We take Mr. Wordsworth himself
-for a great poet, a fine moralist, and a deep philosopher; but if he
-insists on introducing us to a friend of his, a parish clerk, or the
-barber of the village, who is as wise as himself, we must be excused
-if we draw back with some little want of cordial faith. We are
-satisfied with the friendship which subsisted between <em>Parson Adams</em>
-and <em>Joseph Andrews</em>. The author himself lets out occasional hints
-that all is not as it should be amongst these northern Arcadians.
-Though, in general, he professes to soften the harsher features of
-rustic vice, he has given us one picture of depraved and inveterate
-selfishness, which we apprehend could only be found among the
-inhabitants of these boasted mountain districts. The account of one
-of his heroines concludes as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘A sudden illness seiz’d her in the strength</div>
- <div class='line'>Of life’s autumnal season. Shall I tell</div>
- <div class='line'>How on her bed of death the matron lay,</div>
- <div class='line'>To Providence submissive, so she thought;</div>
- <div class='line'>But fretted, vexed, and wrought upon—almost</div>
- <div class='line'>To anger, by the malady that griped</div>
- <div class='line'>Her prostrate frame with unrelaxing power,</div>
- <div class='line'>As the fierce eagle fastens on the lamb.</div>
- <div class='line'>She prayed, she moaned—her husband’s sister watched</div>
- <div class='line'>Her dreary pillow, waited on her needs;</div>
- <div class='line'>And yet the very sound of that kind foot</div>
- <div class='line'>Was anguish to her ears! “And must she rule</div>
- <div class='line'>Sole mistress of this house when I am gone?</div>
- <div class='line'>Sit by my fire—possess what I possessed—</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>Tend what I tended—calling it her own!”</div>
- <div class='line'>Enough;—I fear too much. Of nobler feeling</div>
- <div class='line'>Take this example:—One autumnal evening,</div>
- <div class='line'>While she was yet in prime of health and strength,</div>
- <div class='line'>I well remember, while I passed her door,</div>
- <div class='line'>Musing with loitering step, and upward eye</div>
- <div class='line'>Turned tow’rds the planet Jupiter, that hung</div>
- <div class='line'>Above the centre of the vale, a voice</div>
- <div class='line'>Roused me, her voice;—it said, “That glorious star</div>
- <div class='line'>In its untroubled element will shine</div>
- <div class='line'>As now it shines, when we are laid in earth,</div>
- <div class='line'>And safe from all our sorrows.” She is safe,</div>
- <div class='line'>And her uncharitable acts, I trust,</div>
- <div class='line'>And harsh unkindnesses, are all forgiven;</div>
- <div class='line'>Though, in this vale, remembered with deep awe!’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>We think it is pushing our love of the admiration of natural objects
-a good deal too far, to make it a set-off against a story like the
-preceding.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>All country people hate each other. They have so little comfort,
-that they envy their neighbours the smallest pleasure or advantage,
-and nearly grudge themselves the necessaries of life. From not being
-accustomed to enjoyment, they become hardened and averse to it—stupid,
-for want of thought—selfish, for want of society. There is
-nothing good to be had in the country, or, if there is, they will not
-let you have it. They had rather injure themselves than oblige any
-one else. Their common mode of life is a system of wretchedness
-and self-denial, like what we read of among barbarous tribes. You
-live out of the world. You cannot get your tea and sugar without
-sending to the next town for it: you pay double, and have it of the
-worst quality. The small-beer is sure to be sour—the milk skimmed—the
-meat bad, or spoiled in the cooking. You cannot do a single
-thing you like; you cannot walk out or sit at home, or write or read,
-or think or look as if you did, without being subject to impertinent
-curiosity. The apothecary annoys you with his complaisance; the
-parson with his superciliousness. If you are poor, you are despised;
-if you are rich, you are feared and hated. If you do any one a
-favour, the whole neighbourhood is up in arms; the clamour is like
-that of a rookery; and the person himself, it is ten to one, laughs
-at you for your pains, and takes the first opportunity of shewing you
-that he labours under no uneasy sense of obligation. There is a
-perpetual round of mischief-making and backbiting for want of any
-better amusement. There are no shops, no taverns, no theatres, no
-opera, no concerts, no pictures, no public-buildings, no crowded
-streets, no noise of coaches, or of courts of law,—neither courtiers nor
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>courtesans, no literary parties, no fashionable routs, no society, no
-books, or knowledge of books. Vanity and luxury are the civilisers
-of the world, and sweeteners of human life. Without objects either
-of pleasure or action, it grows harsh and crabbed: the mind becomes
-stagnant, the affections callous, and the eye dull. Man left to himself
-soon degenerates into a very disagreeable person. Ignorance is
-always bad enough; but rustic ignorance is intolerable. Aristotle has
-observed, that tragedy purifies the affections by terror and pity. If
-so, a company of tragedians should be established at the public
-expence, in every village or hundred, as a better mode of education
-than either Bell’s or Lancaster’s. The benefits of knowledge are
-never so well understood as from seeing the effects of ignorance, in
-their naked, undisguised state, upon the common country people.
-Their selfishness and insensibility are perhaps less owing to the hardships
-and privations, which make them, like people out at sea in a
-boat, ready to devour one another, than to their having no idea of
-anything beyond themselves and their immediate sphere of action.
-They have no knowledge of, and consequently can take no interest
-in, anything which is not an object of their senses, and of their daily
-pursuits. They hate all strangers, and have generally a nickname
-for the inhabitants of the next village. The two young noblemen
-in Guzman d’Alfarache, who went to visit their mistresses only a
-league out of Madrid, were set upon by the peasants, who came round
-them calling out, ‘<em>A wolf</em>.’ Those who have no enlarged or
-liberal ideas, can have no disinterested or generous sentiments. Persons
-who are in the habit of reading novels and romances, are compelled
-to take a deep interest in, and to have their affections strongly
-excited by, fictitious characters and imaginary situations; their thoughts
-and feelings are constantly carried out of themselves, to persons they
-never saw, and things that never existed: history enlarges the mind,
-by familiarising us with the great vicissitudes of human affairs, and
-the catastrophes of states and kingdoms; the study of morals accustoms
-us to refer our actions to a general standard of right and wrong;
-and abstract reasoning, in general, strengthens the love of truth, and
-produces an inflexibility of principle which cannot stoop to low trick
-and cunning. Books, in Lord Bacon’s phrase, are ‘a discipline of
-humanity.’ Country people have none of these advantages, nor any
-others to supply the place of them. Having no circulating libraries
-to exhaust their love of the marvellous, they amuse themselves with
-fancying the disasters and disgraces of their particular acquaintance.
-Having no hump-backed <em>Richard</em> to excite their wonder and abhorrence,
-they make themselves a bugbear of their own, out of the first
-obnoxious person they can lay their hands on. Not having the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>fictitious distresses and gigantic crimes of poetry to stimulate their
-imagination and their passions, they vent their whole stock of spleen,
-malice, and invention, on their friends and next-door neighbours.
-They get up a little pastoral drama at home, with fancied events, but
-real characters. All their spare time is spent in manufacturing and
-propagating the lie for the day, which does its office, and expires.
-The next day is spent in the same manner. It is thus that they
-embellish the simplicity of rural life! The common people in civilised
-countries are a kind of domesticated savages. They have not the
-wild imagination, the passions, the fierce energies, or dreadful vicissitudes
-of the savage tribes, nor have they the leisure, the indolent
-enjoyments and romantic superstitions, which belonged to the pastoral
-life in milder climates, and more remote periods of society. They are
-taken out of a state of nature, without being put in possession of the
-refinements of art. The customs and institutions of society cramp
-their imaginations without giving them knowledge. If the inhabitants
-of the mountainous districts described by Mr. Wordsworth are less
-gross and sensual than others, they are more selfish. Their egotism
-becomes more concentrated, as they are more insulated, and their
-purposes more inveterate, as they have less competition to struggle
-with. The weight of matter which surrounds them, crushes the finer
-sympathies. Their minds become hard and cold, like the rocks
-which they cultivate. The immensity of their mountains makes the
-human form appear little and insignificant. Men are seen crawling
-between Heaven and earth, like insects to their graves. Nor do they
-regard one another more than flies on a wall. Their physiognomy
-expresses the materialism of their character, which has only one
-principle—rigid self-will. They move on with their eyes and foreheads
-fixed, looking neither to the right nor to the left, with a heavy
-slouch in their gait, and seeming as if nothing would divert them
-from their path. We do not admire this plodding pertinacity, always
-directed to the main chance. There is nothing which excites so
-little sympathy in our minds, as exclusive selfishness. If our theory
-is wrong, at least it is taken from pretty close observation, and is, we
-think, confirmed by Mr. Wordsworth’s own account.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Of the stories contained in the latter part of the volume, we like
-that of the Whig and Jacobite friends, and of the good knight, Sir
-Alfred Irthing, the best. The last reminded us of a fine sketch of
-a similar character in the beautiful poem of <cite>Hart Leap Well</cite>. To
-conclude,—if the skill with which the poet had chosen his materials
-had been equal to the power which he has undeniably exerted over
-them, if the objects (whether persons or things) which he makes
-use of as the vehicle of his sentiments, had been such as to convey
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>them in all their depth and force, then the production before us might
-indeed ‘have proved a monument,’ as he himself wishes it, worthy
-of the author, and of his country. Whether, as it is, this very original
-and powerful performance may not rather remain like one of those
-stupendous but half-finished structures, which have been suffered to
-moulder into decay, because the cost and labour attending them
-exceeded their use or beauty, we feel that it would be presumptuous
-in us to determine.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>No. 31.</span>]&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; CHARACTER OF THE LATE MR. PITT<a id='r61' /><a href='#f61' class='c012'><sup>[61]</sup></a></h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>The character of Mr. Pitt was, perhaps, one of the most singular
-that ever existed. With few talents, and fewer virtues, he acquired
-and preserved, in one of the most trying situations, and in spite of all
-opposition, the highest reputation for the possession of every moral
-excellence, and as having carried the attainments of eloquence and
-wisdom as far as human abilities could go. This he did (strange as
-it may appear) by a negation (together with the common virtues) of
-the common vices of human nature, and by the complete negation of
-every other talent that might interfere with the only ones which he
-possessed in a supreme degree, and which, indeed, may be made to
-include the appearance of all others,—an artful use of words, and a
-certain dexterity of logical arrangement. In these alone his power
-consisted; and the defect of all other qualities, which usually constitute
-greatness, contributed to the more complete success of these.
-Having no strong feelings, no distinct perceptions,—his mind having
-no link, as it were, to connect it with the world of external nature,
-every subject presented to him nothing more than a <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">tabula rasa</span></i>, on
-which he was at liberty to lay whatever colouring of language he
-pleased; having no general principles, no comprehensive views of
-things, no moral habits of thinking, no system of action, there was
-nothing to hinder him from pursuing any particular purpose by any
-means that offered; having never any plan, he could not be convicted
-of inconsistency, and his own pride and obstinacy were the only rules
-of his conduct. Without insight into human nature, without sympathy
-with the passions of men, or apprehension of their real designs, he
-seemed perfectly insensible to the consequences of things, and would
-believe nothing till it actually happened. The fog and haze in
-which he saw every thing communicated itself to others; and the
-total indistinctness and uncertainty of his own ideas tended to confound
-the perceptions of his hearers more effectually than the most
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>ingenious misrepresentation could have done. Indeed, in defending
-his conduct, he never seemed to consider himself as at all responsible
-for the success of his measures, or to suppose that future events were
-in our own power; but that, as the best-laid schemes might fail, and
-there was no providing against all possible contingencies, this was
-sufficient excuse for our plunging at once into any dangerous or
-absurd enterprise without the least regard to consequences. His
-reserved logic confined itself solely to the <em>possible</em> and the <em>impossible</em>,
-and he appeared to regard the <em>probable</em> and <em>improbable</em>, the only
-foundation of moral prudence or political wisdom, as beneath the
-notice of a profound statesman; as if the pride of the human intellect
-were concerned in never entrusting itself with subjects, where it may be
-compelled to acknowledge its weakness. Nothing could ever drive
-him out of his dull forms, and naked generalities; which, as they are
-susceptible neither of degree nor variation, are therefore equally
-applicable to every emergency that can happen: and in the most
-critical aspect of affairs, he saw nothing but the same flimsy web of
-remote possibilities and metaphysical uncertainty. In his mind, the
-wholesome pulp of practical wisdom and salutary advice was immediately
-converted into the dry chaff and husks of a miserable logic.
-From his manner of reasoning, he seemed not to have believed that
-the truth of his statements depended on the reality of the facts, but
-that the facts themselves depended on the order in which he arranged
-them in words: you would not suppose him to be agitating a serious
-question, which had real grounds to go upon, but to be declaiming
-upon an imaginary thesis, proposed as an exercise in the schools. He
-never set himself to examine the force of the objections that were
-brought against him, or attempted to defend his measures upon clear,
-solid grounds of his own; but constantly contented himself with
-first gravely stating the logical form, or dilemma to which the question
-reduced itself; and then, after having declared his opinion, proceeded
-to amuse his hearers by a series of rhetorical common-places,
-connected together in grave, sonorous, and elaborately constructed
-periods, without ever shewing their real application to the subject in
-dispute. Thus, if any member of the opposition disapproved of any
-measure, and enforced his objections by pointing out the many evils
-with which it was fraught, or the difficulties attending its execution,
-his only answer was, ‘that it was true there might be inconveniences
-attending the measure proposed, but we were to remember,
-that every expedient that could be devised might be said to be nothing
-more than a choice of difficulties, and that all that human prudence could
-do, was to consider on which side the advantages lay; that, for his
-part, he conceived that the present measure was attended with more
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>advantages and fewer disadvantages than any other that could be
-adopted; that it we were diverted from our object by every appearance
-of difficulty, the wheels of government would be clogged by
-endless delays and imaginary grievances; that most of the objections
-made to the measure appeared to him to be trivial, others of them
-unfounded and improbable; or that, if a scheme, free from all these
-objections, could be proposed, it might, after all, prove inefficient; while,
-in the meantime, a material object remained unprovided for, or the
-opportunity of action was lost.’ This mode of reasoning is admirably
-described by Hobbes, in speaking of the writings of some of the
-schoolmen, of whom he says that ‘they had learned the trick of
-imposing what they list upon their readers, and declining the force of
-true reason by verbal forks, that is, distinctions, which signify nothing,
-but serve only to astonish the multitude of ignorant men.’
-That what we have here stated comprehends the whole force of his
-mind, which consisted solely in this evasive dexterity and perplexing
-formality, assisted by a copiousness of words and common-place topics,
-will, we think, be evident to any one who carefully looks over his
-speeches, undazzled by the reputation or personal influence of the
-speaker. It will be in vain to look in them for any of the common
-proofs of human genius or wisdom. He has not left behind him a
-single memorable saying,—not one profound maxim,—one solid observation,—one
-forcible description,—one beautiful thought,—one humorous
-picture,—one affecting sentiment. He has made no addition
-whatever to the stock of human knowledge. He did not possess any
-one of those faculties which contribute to the instruction and delight
-of mankind,—depth of understanding, imagination, sensibility, wit,
-vivacity, clear and solid judgment. But it may be asked, If these
-qualities are not to be found in him, where are we to look for them?
-and we may be required to point out instances of them. We shall
-answer then, that he had none of the abstract, legislative wisdom,
-refined sagacity, or rich, impetuous, high-wrought imagination of
-Burke; the manly eloquence, exact knowledge, vehemence, and
-natural simplicity of Fox; the ease, brilliancy, and acuteness of
-Sheridan. It is not merely that he had not all these qualities in the
-degree that they were severally possessed by his rivals, but he had
-not any of them in any remarkable degree. His reasoning is a
-technical arrangement of unmeaning common-places, his eloquence
-rhetorical, his style monotonous and artificial. If he could pretend
-to any one excellence more than another, it was to taste
-in composition. There is certainly nothing low, nothing puerile,
-nothing far-fetched or abrupt in his speeches; there is a kind of
-faultless regularity pervading them throughout; but in the confined,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>formal, passive mode of eloquence which he adopted, it seemed rather
-more difficult to commit errors than to avoid them. A man who
-is determined never to move out of the beaten road cannot lose his
-way. However, habit, joined to the peculiar mechanical memory
-which he possessed, carried this correctness to a degree which, in an
-extemporaneous speaker, was almost miraculous; he, perhaps, hardly
-ever uttered a sentence that was not perfectly regular and connected.
-In this respect, he not only had the advantage over his own contemporaries,
-but perhaps no one that ever lived equalled him in this
-singular faculty. But for this, he would always have passed for a
-common man; and to this the constant sameness, and, if we may so
-say, vulgarity of his ideas, must have contributed not a little, as there
-was nothing to distract his mind from this one object of his unintermitted
-attention; and as, even in his choice of words, he never aimed
-at any thing more than a certain general propriety and stately uniformity
-of style. His talents were exactly fitted for the situation in which
-he was placed; where it was his business not to overcome others, but
-to avoid being overcome. He was able to baffle opposition, not
-from strength or firmness, but from the evasive ambiguity and impalpable
-nature of his resistance, which gave no hold to the rude
-grasp of his opponents: no force could bind the loose phantom, and
-his mind (though ‘not matchless, and his pride humbled by such
-rebuke’) soon rose from defeat unhurt,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘And in its liquid texture, mortal wound</div>
- <div class='line'>Receiv’d no more than can the fluid air.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>No. 32.</span>]&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; ON RELIGIOUS HYPOCRISY&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; [<span class='sc'>Oct. 9, 1814.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>Religion either makes men wise and virtuous, or it makes them
-set up false pretences to both. In the latter case, it makes them
-hypocrites to themselves as well as others. Religion is, in grosser
-minds, an enemy to self-knowledge. The consciousness of the
-presence of an all-powerful Being, who is both the witness and judge
-of every thought, word, and action, where it does not produce its
-proper effect, forces the religious man to practise every mode of
-deceit upon himself with respect to his real character and motives;
-for it is only by being wilfully blind to his own faults, that he can
-suppose they will escape the eye of Omniscience. Consequently,
-the whole business of a religious man’s life, if it does not conform
-to the strict line of his duty, may be said to be to gloss over his
-errors to himself, and to invent a thousand shifts and palliations, in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>order to hoodwink the Almighty. While he is sensible of his own
-delinquency, he knows that it cannot escape the penetration of his
-invisible Judge; and the distant penalty annexed to every offence,
-though not sufficient to make him desist from the commission of it,
-will not suffer him to rest easy, till he has made some compromise
-with his own conscience as to his motives for committing it. As
-far as relates to this world, a cunning knave may take a pride in the
-imposition he practises upon others; and, instead of striving to conceal
-his true character from himself, may chuckle with inward satisfaction
-at the folly of those who are not wise enough to detect it. ‘But ’tis
-not so above.’ This shallow, skin-deep hypocrisy will not serve the
-turn of the religious devotee, who is ‘compelled to give in evidence
-against himself,’ and who must first become the dupe of his own
-imposture, before he can flatter himself with the hope of concealment,
-as children hide their eyes with their hands, and fancy that no one
-can see them. Religious people often pray very heartily for the
-forgiveness of a ‘multitude of trespasses and sins,’ as a mark of their
-humility, but we never knew them admit any one fault in particular,
-or acknowledge themselves in the wrong in any instance whatever.
-The natural jealousy of self-love is in them heightened by the fear of
-damnation, and they plead <em>Not Guilty</em> to every charge brought against
-them, with all the conscious terrors of a criminal at the bar. It is
-for this reason that the greatest hypocrites in the world are religious
-hypocrites.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This quality, as it has been sometimes found united with the
-clerical character, is known by the name of <em>Priestcraft</em>. The
-Ministers of Religion are perhaps more liable to this vice than any
-other class of people. They are obliged to assume a greater degree
-of sanctity, though they have it not, and to screw themselves up to
-an unnatural pitch of severity and self-denial. They must keep a
-constant guard over themselves, have an eye always to their own
-persons, never relax in their gravity, nor give the least scope to their
-inclinations. A single slip, if discovered, may be fatal to them.
-Their influence and superiority depend on their pretensions to virtue
-and piety; and they are tempted to draw liberally on the funds of
-credulity and ignorance allotted for their convenient support. All
-this cannot be very friendly to downright simplicity of character.
-Besides, they are so accustomed to inveigh against the vices of others,
-that they naturally forget that they have any of their own to correct.
-They see vice as an object always out of themselves, with which they
-have no other concern than to denounce and stigmatise it. They are
-only reminded of it <em>in the third person</em>. They as naturally associate
-sin and its consequences with their flocks as a pedagogue associates a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>false concord and flogging with his scholars. If we may so express
-it, they serve as conductors to the lightning of divine indignation,
-and have only to point the thunders of the law at others. They
-identify themselves with that perfect system of faith and morals, of
-which they are the professed teachers, and regard any imputation
-on their conduct as an indirect attack on the function to which they
-belong, or as compromising the authority under which they act. It
-is only the head of the Popish church who assumes the title of
-<em>God’s Vicegerent upon Earth</em>; but the feeling is nearly common
-to all the oracular interpreters of the will of Heaven—from the
-successor of St. Peter down to the simple, unassuming Quaker, who,
-disclaiming the imposing authority of title and office, yet fancies
-himself the immediate organ of a preternatural impulse, and affects to
-speak only as the spirit moves him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There is another way in which the formal profession of religion
-aids hypocrisy, by erecting a secret tribunal, to which those who
-affect a more than ordinary share of it can (in case of need) appeal
-from the judgments of men. The religious impostor, reduced to his
-last shift, and having no other way left to avoid the most ‘open and
-apparent shame,’ rejects the fallible decisions of the world, and
-thanks God that there is one who knows the heart. He is amenable
-to a higher jurisdiction, and while all is well with Heaven, he can
-pity the errors, and smile at the malice of his enemies! Whatever
-cuts men off from their dependence on common opinion or obvious
-appearances, must open a door to evasion and cunning, by setting up
-a standard of right and wrong in every one’s own breast, of the truth
-of which nobody can judge but the person himself. There are some
-fine instances in the old plays and novels (the best commentaries on
-human nature) of the effect of this principle, in giving the last finishing
-to the character of duplicity. Miss Harris, in Fielding’s <cite>Amelia</cite>,
-is one of the most striking. Molière’s <cite>Tartuffe</cite> is another instance of
-the facility with which religion may be perverted to the purposes
-of the most flagrant hypocrisy. It is an impenetrable fastness, to
-which this worthy person, like so many others, retires without the
-fear of pursuit. It is an additional disguise, in which he wraps
-himself up like a cloak. It is a stalking-horse, which is ready on
-all occasions,—an invisible conscience, which goes about with him,—his
-good genius, that becomes surety for him in all difficulties,—swears
-to the purity of his motives,—extricates him out of the most desperate
-circumstances,—baffles detection, and furnishes a plea to which there
-is no answer.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The same sort of reasoning will account for the old remark, that
-persons who are stigmatised as non-conformists to the established
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>religion, Jews, Presbyterians, etc., are more disposed to this vice
-than their neighbours. They are inured to the contempt of the
-world, and steeled against its prejudices: and the same indifference
-which fortifies them against the unjust censures of mankind, may be
-converted, as occasion requires, into a screen for the most pitiful
-conduct. They have no cordial sympathy with others, and, therefore,
-no sincerity in their intercourse with them. It is the necessity of
-concealment, in the first instance, that produces, and is, in some
-measure, an excuse for, the habit of hypocrisy.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Hypocrisy, as it is connected with cowardice, seems to imply
-weakness of body or want of spirit. The impudence and insensibility
-which belong to it, ought to suppose robustness of constitution.
-There is certainly a very successful and formidable class of sturdy,
-jolly, able-bodied hypocrites, the Friar Johns of the profession.
-Raphael has represented Elymas the Sorcerer, with a hard iron visage,
-and large uncouth figure, made up of bones and muscles; as one not
-troubled with weak nerves or idle scruples—as one who repelled all
-sympathy with others—who was not to be jostled out of his course
-by their censures or suspicions—and who could break with ease
-through the cobweb snares which he had laid for the credulity of
-others, without being once entangled in his own delusions. His
-outward form betrays the hard, unimaginative, self-willed understanding
-of the sorcerer.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>A.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>No. 33.</span>]&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; ON THE LITERARY CHARACTER&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; [<span class='sc'>Oct. 28, 1813.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>The following remarks are prefixed to the account of Baron Grimm’s
-Correspondence in a late number of a celebrated Journal:-</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>‘There is nothing more exactly painted in these graphical volumes,
-than the character of M. Grimm himself; and the beauty of it is,
-that, as there is nothing either natural or peculiar about it, it may
-stand for the character of all the wits and philosophers he frequented.
-He had more wit, perhaps, and more sound sense and information,
-than the greatest part of the society in which he lived; but the
-leading traits belong to the whole class, and to all classes, indeed,
-in similar situations, in every part of the world. Whenever there
-is a very large assemblage of persons who have no other occupation
-but to amuse themselves, there will infallibly be generated acuteness
-of intellect, refinement of manners, and good taste in conversation;
-and, with the same certainty, all profound thought, and all serious
-affection, will be discarded from their society.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>‘The multitude of persons and things that force themselves on the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>attention in such a scene, and the rapidity with which they succeed
-each other, and pass away, prevent any one from making a deep or
-permanent impression; and the mind, having never been tasked to
-any course of application, and long habituated to this lively succession
-and variety of objects, comes at last to require the excitement of
-perpetual change, and to find a multiplicity of friends as indispensable
-as a multiplicity of amusements. Thus the characteristics of large
-and polished society come almost inevitably to be, wit and heartlessness—acuteness
-and perpetual derision. The same impatience of uniformity,
-and passion for variety, which give so much grace to their
-conversation, by excluding all tediousness and pertinacious wrangling,
-make them incapable of dwelling for many minutes on the feelings
-and concerns of any one individual; while the constant pursuit of
-little gratifications, and the weak dread of all uneasy sensations, render
-them equally averse from serious sympathy and deep thought.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>‘The whole style and tone of this publication affords the most
-striking illustration of these general remarks. From one end of it
-to the other, it is a display of the most complete heartlessness, and
-the most uninterrupted levity. It chronicles the deaths of half the
-author’s acquaintance, and makes jests upon them all; and is much
-more serious in discussing the merits of an opera-dancer, than in considering
-the evidence for the being of a God, or the first foundations
-of morality. Nothing, indeed, can be more just or conclusive than
-the remark that is forced from M. Grimm himself, upon the utter
-carelessness, and instant oblivion, that followed the death of one of
-the most distinguished, active, and amiable members of his coterie:
-“<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Tant il est vrai que ce que nous appelons <em>la société</em>, est ce qu’il y
-a de plus léger, plus ingrat, et de plus frivole au monde!</span>”’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>These remarks, though shrewd and sensible in themselves, apply
-rather to the character of M. Grimm and his friends as men of the
-world, after their initiation into the refined society of Paris and the
-great world, than as mere men of letters. There is, however, a
-character which every man of letters has before he comes into society,
-and which he carries into the world with him, which we shall here
-attempt to describe.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The weaknesses and vices that arise from a constant intercourse
-with books, are in certain respects the same with those which arise
-from daily intercourse with the world; yet each has a character and
-operation of its own, which may either counteract or aggravate the
-tendency of the other. The same dissipation of mind, the same listlessness,
-languor, and indifference, may be produced by both, but
-they are produced in different ways, and exhibit very different appearances.
-The defects of the literary character proceed, not from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>frivolity and voluptuous indolence, but from the overstrained exertion
-of the faculties, from abstraction and refinement. A man without
-talents or education might mingle in the same society, might give in
-to all the gaiety and foppery of the age, might see the same ‘multiplicity
-of persons and things,’ but would not become a wit and a
-philosopher for all that. As far as the change of actual objects, the
-real variety and dissipation goes, there is no difference between
-M. Grimm and a courtier of Francis <span class='fss'>I.</span>—between the consummate
-philosopher and the giddy girl—between Paris, amidst the barbaric
-refinements of the middle of the eighteenth century, and any other
-metropolis at any other period. It is in the <em>ideal</em> change of objects,
-in the <em>intellectual</em> dissipation of literature and of literary society, that
-we are to seek for the difference. The very same languor and listlessness
-which, in fashionable life, are owing to the rapid ‘succession
-of persons and things,’ may be found, and even in a more intense
-degree, in the most recluse student, who has no knowledge whatever
-of the great world, who has never been present at the sallies of a
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">petit souper</span></i>, or complimented a lady on presenting her with a bouquet.
-It is the province of literature to anticipate the dissipation of real
-objects, and to increase it. It creates a fictitious restlessness and
-craving after variety, by creating a fictitious world around us, and by
-hurrying us, not only through all the mimic scenes of life, but by
-plunging us into the endless labyrinths of imagination. Thus the
-common indifference produced by the distraction of successive amusements,
-is superseded by a general indifference to surrounding objects,
-to real persons and things, occasioned by the disparity between the
-world of our imagination and that without us. The scenes of real
-life are not got up in the same style of magnificence; they want
-dramatic illusion and effect. The high-wrought feelings require all
-the concomitant and romantic circumstances which fancy can bring
-together to satisfy them, and cannot find them in any given object.
-M. Grimm was not, by his own account, <em>born</em> a lover; but even
-supposing him to have been, in gallantry of temper, a very Amadis,
-would it have been necessary that the enthusiasm of a philosopher and
-a man of genius should have run the gauntlet of all the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">bonnes fortunes</span></i>
-of Paris to evaporate into insensibility and indifference? Would not
-a Clarissa, a new Eloise, a Cassandra, or a Berenice, have produced
-the same mortifying effects on a person of his great critical and acumen
-and <span lang="it" xml:lang="it">virtù</span>? Where, O where would he find the rocks of Meillerie
-in the precincts of the Palais Royal, or on what lips would Julia’s
-kisses grow? Who, after wandering with Angelica, or having seen
-the heavenly face of Una, might not meet with impunity a whole
-circle of literary ladies? Cowley’s mistresses reigned by turns in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>poet’s fancy, and the beauties of King Charles <span class='fss'>II.</span> perplex the eye in
-the preference of their charms as much now as they ever did. One
-trifling coquette only drives out another; but Raphael’s Galatea kills
-the whole race of pertness and vulgarity at once. After ranging in
-dizzy mazes, through the regions of imaginary beauty, the mind sinks
-down, breathless and exhausted, on the earth. In common minds,
-indifference is produced by mixing with the world. Authors and
-artists bring it into the world with them. The disappointment of the
-ideal enthusiast is indeed greatest at first, and he grows reconciled to
-his situation by degrees; whereas the mere man of the world becomes
-more dissatisfied and fastidious, and more of a misanthrope, the longer
-he lives.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is much the same in friendships founded on literary motives.
-Literary men are not attached to the persons of their friends, but to
-their minds. They look upon them in the same light as on the books
-in their library, and read them till they are tired. In casual acquaintances
-friendship grows out of habit. Mutual kindnesses beget mutual
-attachment; and numberless little local occurrences in the course of a
-long intimacy, furnish agreeable topics of recollection, and are almost
-the only sources of conversation among such persons. They have an
-immediate pleasure in each other’s company. But in literature nothing
-of this kind takes place. Petty and local circumstances are beneath
-the dignity of philosophy. Nothing will go down but wit or wisdom.
-The mind is kept in a perpetual state of violent exertion and expectation,
-and as there cannot always be a fresh supply of stimulus to excite
-it, as the same remarks or the same <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">bon mots</span></i> come to be often
-repeated, or others so like them, that we can easily anticipate the
-effect, and are no longer surprised into admiration, we begin to relax
-in the frequency of our visits, and the heartiness of our welcome.
-When we are tired of a book we can lay it down, but we cannot so
-easily put our friends on the shelf when we grow weary of their
-society. The necessity of keeping up appearances, therefore, adds to
-the dissatisfaction on both sides, and at length irritates indifference
-into contempt.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>By the help of arts and science, everything finds an ideal level.
-Ideas assume the place of realities, and realities sink into nothing.
-Actual events and objects produce little or no effect on the mind,
-when it has been long accustomed to draw its strongest interest from
-constant contemplation. It is necessary that it should, as it were,
-recollect itself—that it should call out its internal resources, and refine
-upon its own feelings—place the object at a distance, and embellish it
-at pleasure. By degrees all things are made to serve as hints, and
-occasions for the exercise of intellectual activity. It was on this
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>principle that the sentimental Frenchman left his Mistress, in order
-that he might think of her. Cicero ceased to mourn for the loss of
-his daughter, when he recollected how fine an opportunity it would
-afford him to write an eulogy to her memory; and Mr. Shandy
-lamented over the death of Master Bobby much in the same manner.
-The insensibility of Authors, etc., to domestic and private calamities
-has been often carried to a ludicrous excess, but it is less than it
-appears to be. The genius of philosophy is not yet <em>quite</em> understood.
-For instance, the man who might seem at the moment undisturbed
-by the death of a wife or mistress, would perhaps never walk out on a
-fine evening as long as he lived, without recollecting her; and a
-disappointment in love that ‘heaves no sigh and sheds no tear,’ may
-penetrate to the heart, and remain fixed there ever after. <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Hæret lateri
-lethalis arundo.</span></i> The blow is felt only by reflection, the rebound is
-fatal. Our feelings become more ideal; the impression of the
-moment is less violent, but the effect is more general and permanent.
-Those whom we love best, take nearly the same rank in our estimation
-as the heroine of a favourite novel! Indeed, after all, compared with
-the genuine feelings of nature, ‘clad in flesh and blood,’ with real
-passions and affections, conversant about real objects, the life of a
-mere man of letters and sentiment appears to be at best but a living
-death; a dim twilight existence: a sort of wandering about in an
-Elysian fields of our own making; a refined, spiritual, disembodied
-state, like that of the ghosts of Homer’s heroes, who, we are told,
-would gladly have exchanged situations with the meanest peasant upon
-earth!<a id='r62' /><a href='#f62' class='c012'><sup>[62]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The moral character of men of letters depends very much upon the
-same principles. All actions are seen through that general medium
-which reduces them to individual insignificance. Nothing fills or
-engrosses the mind—nothing seems of sufficient importance to interfere
-with our present inclination. Prejudices, as well as attachments, lose
-their hold upon us, and we palter with our duties as we please.
-Moral obligations, by being perpetually refined upon, and discussed,
-lose their force and efficacy, become mere dry distinctions of the
-understanding,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Play round the head, but never reach the heart.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Opposite reasons and consequences balance one another, while appetite
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>or interest turns the scale. Hence the severe sarcasm of Rousseau,
-‘<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Tout homme reflechi est mechant</span></i>.’ In fact, it must be confessed, that,
-as all things produce their extremes, so excessive refinement tends to
-produce equal grossness. The tenuity of our intellectual desires
-leaves a void in the mind which requires to be filled up by coarser
-gratification, and that of the senses is always at hand. They alone
-always retain their strength. There is not a greater mistake than the
-common supposition, that intellectual pleasures are capable of endless
-repetition, and physical ones not so. The one, indeed, may be spread
-out over a greater surface, they may be dwelt upon and kept in mind
-at will, and for that very reason they wear out, and pall by comparison,
-and require perpetual variety. Whereas the physical gratification
-only occupies us at the moment, is, as it were, absorbed in itself, and
-forgotten as soon as it is over, and when it returns is <em>as good as new</em>.
-No one could ever read the same book for any length of time without
-being tired of it, but a man is never tired of his meals, however little
-variety his table may have to boast. This reasoning is equally true
-of all persons who have given much of their time to study and abstracted
-speculations. Grossness and sensuality have been marked
-with no less triumph in the religious devotee than in the professed
-philosopher. The perfect joys of heaven do not satisfy the cravings
-of nature; and the good Canon in Gil Blas might be opposed with
-effect to some of the portraits in M. Grimm’s Correspondence.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>T. T.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>No. 34.</span>]&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; ON COMMON-PLACE CRITICS&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; [<span class='sc'>Nov. 24, 1816.</span></h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Nor can I think what thoughts they can conceive.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>We have already given some account of common-place people; we
-shall in this number attempt a description of another class of the
-community, who may be called (by way of distinction) common-place
-critics. The former are a set of people who have no opinions of
-their own, and do not pretend to have any; the latter are a set of
-people who have no opinions of their own, but who affect to have
-one upon every subject you can mention. The former are a very
-honest, good sort of people, who are contented to pass for what they
-are; the latter are a very pragmatical, troublesome sort of people,
-who would pass for what they are not, and try to put off their common-place
-notions in all companies and on all subjects, as something
-of their own. They are of both species, the grave and the gay; and
-it is hard to say which is the most tiresome.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A common-place critic has something to say upon every occasion,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>and he always tells you either what is not true, or what you knew
-before, or what is not worth knowing. He is a person who thinks
-by proxy, and talks by rote. He differs with you, not because he
-thinks you are in the wrong, but because he thinks somebody else
-will think so. Nay, it would be well if he stopped here; but he
-will undertake to misrepresent you by anticipation, lest others should
-misunderstand you, and will set you right, not only in opinions which
-you have, but in those which you may be supposed to have. Thus, if
-you say that <em>Bottom</em> the weaver is a character that has not had justice
-done to it, he shakes his head, is afraid you will be thought extravagant,
-and wonders you should think the <cite>Midsummer Night’s Dream</cite>
-the finest of all Shakspeare’s plays. He judges of matters of taste
-and reasoning as he does of dress and fashion, by the prevailing tone
-of good company; and you would as soon persuade him to give up
-any sentiment that is current there, as to wear the hind part of his
-coat before. By the best company, of which he is perpetually talking,
-he means persons who live on their own estates, and other people’s
-ideas. By the opinion of the world, to which he pays and expects
-you to pay great deference, he means that of a little circle of his own,
-where he hears and is heard. Again, <em>good sense</em> is a phrase constantly
-in his mouth, by which he does not mean his own sense or that of
-anybody else, but the opinions of a number of persons who have
-agreed to take their opinions on trust from others. If any one
-observes that there is something better than common sense, viz., <em>uncommon</em>
-sense, he thinks this a bad joke. If you object to the opinions
-of the majority, as often arising from ignorance or prejudice, he
-appeals from them to the sensible and well-informed; and if you say
-there may be other persons as sensible and well informed as himself
-and his friends, he smiles at your presumption. If you attempt to
-prove anything to him, it is in vain, for he is not thinking of what
-you say, but of what will be thought of it. The stronger your
-reasons, the more incorrigible he thinks you; and he looks upon any
-attempt to expose his gratuitous assumptions as the wandering of a
-disordered imagination. His notions are like plaster figures cast in
-a mould, as brittle as they are hollow; but they will break before
-you can make them give way. In fact, he is the representative of
-a large part of the community, the shallow, the vain, and indolent,
-of those who have time to talk, and are not bound to think: and he
-considers any deviation from the select forms of common-place, or
-the accredited language of conventional impertinence, as compromising
-the authority under which he acts in his diplomatic capacity. It
-is wonderful how this class of people agree with one another; how
-they herd together in all their opinions; what a tact they have for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>folly; what an instinct for absurdity; what a sympathy in sentiment;
-how they find one another out by infallible signs, like Freemasons!
-The secret of this unanimity and strict accord is, that not any one
-of them ever admits any opinion that can cost the least effort of mind
-in arriving at, or of courage in declaring it. Folly is as consistent
-with itself as wisdom: there is a certain level of thought and sentiment,
-which the weakest minds, as well as the strongest, find out as best
-adapted to them; and you as regularly come to the same conclusions,
-by looking no farther than the surface, as if you dug to the centre of
-the earth! You know beforehand what a critic of this class will say
-on almost every subject the first time he sees you, the next time, the
-time after that, and so on to the end of the chapter. The following
-list of his opinions may be relied on:—It is pretty certain that before
-you have been in the room with him ten minutes, he will give you to
-understand that Shakspeare was a great but irregular genius. Again,
-he thinks it a question whether any one of his plays, if brought out
-now for the first time, would succeed. He thinks that <cite>Macbeth</cite>
-would be the most likely, from the music which has been since introduced
-into it. He has some doubts as to the superiority of the
-French School over us in tragedy, and observes, that Hume and Adam
-Smith were both of that opinion. He thinks Milton’s pedantry a
-great blemish in his writings, and that <cite>Paradise Lost</cite> has many prosaic
-passages in it. He conceives that genius does not always imply taste,
-and that wit and judgment are very different faculties. He considers
-Dr. Johnson as a great critic and moralist, and that his Dictionary was
-a work of prodigious erudition and vast industry; but that some of the
-anecdotes of him in Boswell are trifling. He conceives that Mr.
-Locke was a very original and profound thinker. He thinks Gibbon’s
-style vigorous but florid. He wonders that the author of <em>Junius</em> was
-never found out. He thinks Pope’s translation of the <cite>Iliad</cite> an improvement
-on the simplicity of the original, which was necessary to
-fit it to the taste of modern readers. He thinks there is a great deal
-of grossness in the old comedies; and that there has been a great
-improvement in the morals of the higher classes since the reign of
-Charles <span class='fss'>II.</span> He thinks the reign of Queen Anne the golden period
-of our literature, but that, upon the whole, we have no English writer
-equal to Voltaire. He speaks of Boccacio as a very licentious
-writer, and thinks the wit in Rabelais quite extravagant, though he
-never read either of them. He cannot get through Spenser’s <cite>Fairy
-Queen</cite>, and pronounces all allegorical poetry tedious. He prefers
-Smollett to Fielding, and discovers more knowledge of the world
-in <cite>Gil Blas</cite> than in <cite>Don Quixote</cite>. Richardson he thinks very minute
-and tedious. He thinks the French Revolution has done a great
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>deal of harm to the cause of liberty; and blames Buonaparte for
-being so ambitious. He reads the <cite>Edinburgh</cite> and <cite>Quarterly Reviews</cite>,
-and thinks as they do. He is shy of having an opinion on a new
-actor or a new singer; for the public do not always agree with the
-newspapers. He thinks that the moderns have great advantages over
-the ancients in many respects. He thinks Jeremy Bentham a greater
-man than Aristotle. He can see no reason why artists of the present
-day should not paint as well as Raphael or Titian. For instance, he
-thinks there is something very elegant and classical in Mr. Westall’s
-drawings. He has no doubt that Sir Joshua Reynolds’s Lectures
-were written by Burke. He considers Horne Tooke’s account of
-the conjunction <em>That</em> very ingenious, and holds that no writer can be
-called elegant who uses the present for the subjunctive mood, who
-says <em>If it is</em> for <em>If it be</em>. He thinks Hogarth a great master of low,
-comic humour; and Cobbett a coarse, vulgar writer. He often talks
-of men of liberal education, and men without education, as if that
-made much difference. He judges of people by their pretensions;
-and pays attention to their opinions according to their dress and rank
-in life. If he meets with a fool, he does not find him out; and if he
-meets with any one wiser than himself, he does not know what to
-make of him. He thinks that manners are of great consequence to
-the common intercourse of life. He thinks it difficult to prove the
-existence of any such thing as original genius, or to fix a general
-standard of taste. He does not think it possible to define what wit
-is. In religion, his opinions are liberal. He considers all enthusiasm
-as a degree of madness, particularly to be guarded against by young
-minds; and believes that truth lies in the middle, between the extremes
-of right and wrong. He thinks that the object of poetry is
-to please; and that astronomy is a very pleasing and useful study.
-He thinks all this, and a great deal more, that amounts to nothing.
-We wonder we have remembered one half of it—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘For true no-meaning puzzles more than wit.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Though he has an aversion to all new ideas, he likes all new plans
-and matters-of-fact: the new Schools for All, the Penitentiary, the
-new Bedlam, the new Steam-Boats, the Gas-Lights, the new Patent
-Blacking; every thing of that sort but the Bible Society. The Society
-for the Suppression of Vice he thinks a great nuisance, as every honest
-man must.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In a word, a common-place critic is the pedant of polite conversation.
-He refers to the opinion of Lord M. or Lady G. with the
-same air of significance that the learned pedant does to the authority
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>of Cicero or Virgil; retails the wisdom of the day, as the anecdote-monger
-does the wit; and carries about with him the sentiments of
-people of a certain respectability in life, as the dancing-master does
-their air, or their valets their clothes.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Z.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>No. 35.</span>]&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; ON THE CATALOGUE RAISONNÉ OF THE BRITISH INSTITUTION&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; [<span class='sc'>Nov. 10, 1816.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>The <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Catalogue Raisonné</span> of the pictures lately exhibited at the British
-Institution is worthy of notice, both as it is understood to be a declaration
-of the views of the Royal Academy, and as it contains some
-erroneous notions with respect to art prevalent in this country. It
-sets out with the following passages:—</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>‘The first resolution ever framed by the noblemen and gentlemen
-who met to establish the British Institution, consists of the following
-sentence, viz.:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>‘“The <em>object</em> of the establishment is to facilitate, by a Public
-Exhibition, the <em>Sale</em> of the productions of <em>British</em> artists.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>‘Now, if the Directors had not felt quite certain as to the result
-of the present Exhibition, (of the Flemish School), if they had not
-perfectly satisfied themselves, that, instead of affording any, even the
-least means of promoting <em>unfair and invidious comparisons, it would
-produce abundant matter for exaltation to the living Artist</em>, can we
-possibly imagine they, the foster-parents of British Art, would ever
-have suffered such a display to have taken place? Certainly not.
-If they had not foreseen and fully provided against <em>all such injurious
-results</em>, by the deep and masterly manœuvre alluded to in our former
-remarks, is it conceivable that the Directors would have acted in a
-way so counter, so diametrically in opposition to this their fundamental
-and leading principle? No, No! It is a position which all
-sense of respect for their consistency will not suffer us to admit,
-which all feelings of respect for their views forbid us to allow.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>‘Is it at all to be wondered at, that, in an Exhibition such as this,
-where nothing <em>like a patriotic desire</em> to uphold the arts of their country
-can possibly have place in the minds of the Directors, we should
-attribute to them the desire of <em>holding up the old Masters to derision</em>,
-inasmuch as good policy would allow? Is it to be wondered at, that,
-when the Directors have the three-fold prospect, by so doing, of
-estranging the silly and ignorant Collector from his false and senseless
-infatuation for the <em>Black Masters</em>, of turning his <em>unjust preference</em> from
-Foreign to British Art, and, by affording the living painters a just
-encouragement, teach them to feel that becoming confidence in their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>powers, which an acknowledgment of their merits entitles them to?
-Is it to be wondered at, we say, that a little duplicity should have
-been practised upon this occasion, that some of our ill-advised
-Collectors and second-rate picture Amateurs should have been singled
-out as sheep for the sacrifice, and <em>thus ingeniously</em> made to pay unwilling
-homage <em>to the talents of their countrymen</em>, through that very
-medium by which they had previously been induced <em>to depreciate
-them</em>?’—‘If, in our wish to please the Directors, we should, without
-mercy, damn all that deserves damning, and effectually hide our
-admiration for those pieces and passages which are truly entitled to
-admiration, it must be placed entirely to that <em>patriotic sympathy</em>, which
-we feel in common with the Directors, of holding up to the public,
-as the first and great object, <span class='fss'>THE PATRONAGE OF MODERN ART</span>.’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Once more:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>‘Who does not perceive (except those whose eyes are not made
-for seeing more than they are told by others) that Vandyke’s portraits,
-by the brilliant colour of the velvet hangings, are made to look as if
-they had been newly fetched home from the clear-starcher, with a
-double portion of blue in their ruffs? Who does not see, that the
-angelic females in Rubens’s pictures (particularly in that of the
-Brazen Serpent) labour under a fit of the bile, twice as severe as they
-would do, if they were not suffering on red velvet? Who does not
-see, from the same cause, that the landscapes by the same Master are
-converted into <em>brown studies</em>, and that Rembrandt’s ladies and gentlemen
-of fashion look as if they had been on duty for the whole of last
-week in the Prince Regent’s new sewer? <em>And who, that has any
-penetration, that has any gratitude, does not see, in seeing all this, the
-anxious and benevolent solicitude of the Directors to keep the old masters
-under?</em>’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>So, then, this Writer would think it a matter of lively gratitude,
-and of exultation in the breasts of living Artists, if the Directors, ‘in
-their anxious and benevolent desire to keep the old Masters under,’
-had contrived to make Vandyke’s pictures look like starch and blue:
-if they had converted Rubens’s pictures into brown studies, or a fit
-of the bile; or had dragged Rembrandt’s through the Prince Regent’s
-new sewers. It would have been a great gain, a great triumph to the
-Academy and to the Art, to have nothing left of all the pleasure or
-admiration which those painters had hitherto imparted to the world,
-to find all the excellences which their works had been supposed to
-possess, and all respect for them in the minds of the public destroyed,
-and converted into sudden loathing and disgust. This is, according
-to the Catalogue-writer and his friends, a consummation devoutly to
-be wished for themselves and for the Art. All that is taken from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span>the old Masters is so much added to the moderns; the marring of Art
-is the making of the Academy. This is the kind of patronage and
-promotion of the Fine Arts on which he insists as necessary to keep
-up the reputation of living Artists, and to ensure the sale of their
-works. There is nothing then in common between the merits of the
-old Masters and the doubtful claims of the new: <em>those</em> are not ‘the
-scale by which we can ascend to the love’ of these. The excellences
-of the latter are of their own making and of their own seeing; we
-must take their own word for them; and not only so, but we must
-sacrifice all established principles and all established reputation to
-their upstart pretensions, because, if the old pictures are not totally
-worthless, their own can be good for nothing. The only chance,
-therefore, for the moderns, if the Catalogue-writer is to be believed,
-is to decry all the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">chef-d’œuvres</span></span></i> of the Art, and to hold up all the
-great names in it to derision. If the public once get to relish the
-style of the old Masters, they will no longer tolerate theirs. But so
-long as the old Masters can be <em>kept under</em>, the coloured caricatures of
-the moderns, like <em>Mrs. Peachum’s</em> coloured handkerchiefs, ‘will be
-of sure sale at their warehouse at Redriff.’ The Catalogue-writer
-thinks it necessary, in order to raise the Art in this country, to
-depreciate all Art in all other times and countries. He thinks that
-the way to excite an enthusiastic admiration of genius in the public
-is by setting the example of a vulgar and malignant hatred of it in
-himself. He thinks to inspire a lofty spirit of emulation in the rising
-generation, by shutting his eyes to the excellences of all the finest
-models, or by pouring out upon them the overflowings of his gall and
-envy, to disfigure them in the eyes of others; so that they may see
-nothing in Raphael, in Titian, in Rubens, in Rembrandt, in Vandyke,
-in Claude Lorraine, in Leonardo da Vinci, but the low wit and dirty
-imagination of a paltry scribbler; and come away from the greatest
-monuments of human capacity, without one feeling of excellence in
-art, or of beauty or grandeur in nature. Nay, he would persuade us
-that this is a great public and private benefit, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">viz.</span></i>, that there is no
-such thing as excellence, as genius, as true fame, except what he and
-his anonymous associates arrogate to themselves, with all the profit
-and credit of this degradation of genius, this ruin of Art, this obloquy
-and contempt heaped on great and unrivalled reputation. He thinks
-it a likely mode of producing confidence in the existence and value
-of Art, to prove that there never was any such thing, till the last annual
-Exhibition of the Royal Academy. He would encourage a disinterested
-love of Art, and a liberal patronage of it in the great and
-opulent, by shewing that the living Artists have no regard, but the most
-sovereign and reckless contempt for it, except as it can be made a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span>temporary stalking-horse to their pride and avarice. The writer may
-have a <em>patriotic sympathy</em> with the sale of modern works of Art, but
-we do not see what sympathy there can be between the buyers and
-sellers of these works, except in the love of the Art itself. When
-we find that these patriotic persons would destroy the Art itself to
-promote the sale of their pictures, we know what to say to them.
-We are obliged to the zeal of our critic for having set this matter in
-so clear a light. The public will feel little sympathy with a body of
-Artists who disclaim all sympathy with all other Artists. They will
-doubt their pretensions to genius who have no feeling of respect for
-it in others; they will consider them as bastards, not children of the
-Art, who would destroy their parent. The public will hardly consent,
-when the proposition is put to them in this tangible shape, to give up
-the cause of liberal art and of every liberal sentiment connected with
-it, and enter, with their eyes open, into a pettifogging cabal to keep
-the old Masters under, or hold their names up to derision ‘as good
-sport,’ merely to gratify the selfish importunity of a gang of sturdy
-beggars, who demand public encouragement and support, with a claim
-of settlement in one hand, and a forged certificate of merit in the other.
-They can only deserve well of the public by deserving well of the
-Art. Have we taken these men from the plough, from the counter,
-from the shop-board, from the tap-room and the stable-door, to raise
-them to fortune, to rank, and distinction in life, for the sake of Art,
-to give them a chance of doing something in Art like what had been
-done before them, of promoting and refining the public taste, of
-setting before them the great models of Art, and by a pure love of
-truth and beauty, and by patient and disinterested aspirations after it,
-of rising to the highest excellence, and of making themselves ‘a name
-great above all names’; and do they now turn round upon us, and
-because they have neglected these high objects of their true calling
-for pitiful cabals and filling their pockets, insist that we shall league
-with them in crushing the progress of Art, and the respect attached to
-all its great efforts? There is no other country in the world in which
-such a piece of impudent quackery could be put forward with impunity,
-and still less in which it could be put forward in the garb of
-patriotism. This is the effect of our gross island manners. The
-Catalogue-writer carries his bear-garden notions of this virtue into the
-Fine Arts, and would set about destroying Dutch or Italian pictures as
-he would Dutch shipping or Italian liberty. He goes up to the
-Rembrandts with the same swaggering Jack-tar airs as he would to
-a battery of nine-pounders, and snaps his fingers at Raphael as he
-would at the French. Yet he talks big about the Elgin Marbles,
-because Mr. Payne Knight has made a slip on that subject; though,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>to be consistent, he ought to be for pounding them in a mortar, should
-get his friend the Incendiary to set fire to the room building for them
-at the British Museum, or should get Mr. Soane to build it. Patriotism
-and the Fine Arts have nothing to do with one another—because
-patriotism relates to exclusive advantages, and the advantages of the
-Fine Arts are not exclusive, but communicable. The physical property
-of one country cannot be shared without loss by another: the physical
-force of one country may destroy that of another. These, therefore,
-are objects of national jealousy and fear of encroachment: for the
-interests or rights of different countries may be compromised in them.
-But it is not so in the Fine Arts, which depend upon taste and knowledge.
-We do not consume the works of Art as articles of food, of
-clothing, or fuel; but we brood over their <em>idea</em>, which is accessible
-to all, and may be multiplied without end, ‘with riches fineless.’
-Patriotism is ‘beastly; subtle as the fox for prey; like warlike as
-the wolf for what it eats’; but Art is ideal, and therefore liberal.
-The knowledge or perfection of Art in one age or country is the
-cause of its existence or perfection in another. Art is the cause of
-art in other men. Works of genius done by a Dutchman are the
-cause of genius in an Englishman—are the cause of taste in an
-Englishman. The patronage of foreign Art is, not to prevent, but
-to promote Art in England. It does not prevent, but promote taste
-in England. Art subsists by communication, not by exclusion. The
-light of art, like that of nature, shines on all alike; and its benefit,
-like that of the sun, is in being seen and felt. The spirit of art is
-not the spirit of trade: it is not a question between the grower or
-consumer of some perishable and personal commodity: but it is a
-question between human genius and human taste, how much the one
-can produce for the benefit of mankind, and how much the other can
-enjoy. It is ‘the link of peaceful commerce ‘twixt dividable shores.’
-To take from it this character is to take from it its best privilege, its
-humanity. Would any one, except our Catalogue-virtuoso, think of
-destroying or concealing the monuments of Art in past ages, as inconsistent
-with the progress of taste and civilisation in the present?
-Would any one find fault with the introduction of the works of
-Raphael into this country, as if their being done by an Italian confined
-the benefit to a foreign country, when all the benefit, all the
-great and lasting benefit, (except the purchase-money, the lasting
-burden of the Catalogue, and the great test of the value of Art in
-the opinion of the writer), is instantly communicated to all eyes
-that behold, and all hearts that can feel them? It is many years ago
-since we first saw the prints of the Cartoons hung round the parlour
-of a little inn on the great north road. We were then very young,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>and had not been initiated into the principles of taste and refinement
-of the <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Catalogue Raisonné</span></cite>. We had heard of the fame of the
-Cartoons, but this was the first time that we had ever been admitted
-face to face into the presence of those divine works. ‘How were
-we then uplifted!’ Prophets and Apostles stood before us, and the
-Saviour of the Christian world, with his attributes of faith and
-power; miracles were working on the walls; the hand of Raphael
-was there, and as his pencil traced the lines, we saw god-like spirits
-and lofty shapes descend and walk visibly the earth, but as if their
-thoughts still lifted them above the earth. There was that figure
-of St. Paul, pointing with noble fervour to ‘temples not made with
-hands, eternal in the heavens,’ and that finer one of Christ in the
-boat, whose whole figure seems sustained by meekness and love, and
-that of the same person, surrounded by the disciples, like a flock of
-sheep listening to the music of some divine shepherd. We knew
-not how enough to admire them. If from this transport and
-delight there arose in our breasts a wish, a deep aspiration of mingled
-hope and fear, to be able one day to do something like them, that
-hope has long since vanished; but not with it the love of Art, nor
-delight in works of Art, nor admiration of the genius which produces
-them, nor respect for fame which rewards and crowns them! Did
-we suspect that in this feeling of enthusiasm for the works of Raphael
-we were deficient in patriotic sympathy, or that, in spreading it as
-far as we could, we did an injury to our country or to living Art?
-The very feeling shewed that there was no such distinction in Art,
-that her benefits were common, that the power of genius, like the
-spirit of the world, is everywhere alike present. And would the
-harpies of criticism try to extinguish this common benefit to their
-country from a pretended exclusive attachment to their countrymen?
-Would they rob their country of Raphael to set up the credit of their
-professional little-goes and E. O. tables—‘cutpurses of the Art, that
-from the shelf the precious diadem stole, and put it in their pockets’?
-Tired of exposing such folly, we walked out the other day, and saw
-a bright cloud resting on the bosom of the blue expanse, which
-reminded us of what we had seen in some picture in the Louvre.
-We were suddenly roused from our reverie, by recollecting that till
-we had answered this catchpenny publication we had no right, without
-being liable to a charge of disaffection to our country or treachery
-to the Art, to look at nature, or to think of any thing like it in Art, not
-of British growth and manufacture!</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span>
- <h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>No. 36.</span>]&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; THE SAME SUBJECT CONTINUED&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; [<span class='sc'>Nov. 10, 17, 1816.</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>The Catalogue-writer nicknames the Flemish painters ‘the Black
-Masters.’ Either this means that the works of Rubens and Vandyke
-were originally black pictures, that is, deeply shadowed like those
-of Rembrandt, which is false, there being no painter who used so
-little shadow as Vandyke, or so much colour as Rubens; or it must
-mean that their pictures have turned darker with time, that is, that
-the art itself is a black art. Is this a triumph for the Academy?
-Is the defect and decay of Art a subject of exultation to the national
-genius? Then there is no hope (in this country at least) ‘that a
-great man’s memory may outlive him half a year!’ Do they calculate
-that the decomposition and gradual disappearance of the standard
-works of Art will quicken the demand, and facilitate the sale of modern
-pictures? Have they no hope of immortality themselves, that they
-are glad to see the inevitable dissolution of all that has long flourished
-in splendour and in honour? They are pleased to find, that at the
-end of near two hundred years, the pictures of Vandyke and Rubens
-have suffered half as much from time as those of their late President
-have done in thirty or forty, or their own in the last ten or twelve
-years. So that the glory of painting is that it does not last for ever:
-it is this which puts the ancients and the moderns on a level. They
-hail with undisguised satisfaction the approaches of the slow mouldering
-hand of time in those works which have lasted longest, not
-anticipating the premature fate of their own. Such is their short-sighted
-ambition. A picture is with them like the frame it is in,
-<em>as good as new</em>; and the best picture, that which was last painted.
-They make the weak side of Art the test of its excellence; and
-though a modern picture of two years standing is hardly fit to be
-seen, from the general ignorance of the painter in the mechanical as
-well as other parts of the Art, yet they are sure at any time to get
-the start of Rubens or Vandyke, by painting a picture against the day
-of exhibition. We even question whether they would wish to make
-their own pictures last if they could, and whether they would not
-destroy their own works as well as those of others, (like chalk figures
-on the floors), to have new ones bespoke the next day. The Flemish
-pictures then, except those of Rembrandt, were not originally black;
-they have not faded in proportion to the length of time they have
-been painted. All that comes then of the nickname in the Catalogue is,
-that the pictures of the old Masters have lasted longer than those of the
-present members of the Royal Academy, and that the latter, it is to be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>presumed, do not wish their works to last so long, lest they should be
-called the <em>Black Masters</em>. With respect to Rembrandt, this epitaph
-may be literally true. But, we would ask, whether the style of
-<i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">chiaroscuro</span></i>, in which Rembrandt painted, is not one fine view of nature
-and of art? Whether any other painter carried it to the same height
-of perfection as he did? Whether any other painter ever joined the
-same depth of shadow with the same clearness? Whether his tones
-were not as fine as they were true? Whether a more thorough master
-of his art ever lived? Whether he deserved for this to be nicknamed
-by the Writer of the Catalogue, or to have his works ‘kept under, or
-himself held up to derision,’ by the Patrons and Directors of the
-British Institution for the support and encouragement of the Fine Arts?</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But we have heard it said by a disciple and commentator on the
-Catalogue, (one would think it was hardly possible to descend lower
-than the writer himself), that the Directors of the British Institution
-assume a consequence to themselves, hostile to the pretensions of
-modern professors, out of the reputation of the old Masters, whom
-they affect to look upon with wonder, to worship as something preternatural;—that
-they consider the bare possession of an old picture as
-a title to distinction, and the respect paid to Art as the highest pretension
-of the owner. And is this then a subject of complaint with
-the Academy, that genius is thus thought of, when its claims are once
-fully established? That those high qualities, which are beyond the
-estimate of ignorance and selfishness while living, receive their reward
-from distant ages? Do they not ‘feel the future in the instant’?
-Do they not know, that those qualities which appeal neither to interest
-nor passion can only find their level with time, and would they
-annihilate the only pretensions they have? Or have they no conscious
-affinity with true genius, no claim to the reversion of true fame, no
-right of succession to this lasting inheritance and final reward of great
-exertions, which they would therefore destroy, to prevent others from
-enjoying it? Does all their ambition begin and end in their <em>patriotic
-sympathy</em> with the sale of modern works of Art, and have they no
-fellow-feeling with the hopes and final destiny of human genius?
-What poet ever complained of the respect paid to Homer as derogatory
-to himself? The envy and opposition to established fame is
-peculiar to the race of modern Artists; and it is to be hoped it will
-remain so. It is the fault of their education. It is only by a liberal
-education that we learn to feel respect for the past, or to take an
-interest in the future. The knowledge of Artists is too often confined
-to their art, and their views to their own interest. Even in this they
-are wrong:—in all respects they are wrong. As a mere matter of
-trade, the prejudice in favour of old pictures does not prevent but
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>assist the sale of modern works of Art. If there was not a prejudice
-in favour of old pictures, there could be a prejudice in favour of none,
-and none would be sold. The professors seem to think, that for
-every old picture not sold, one of their own would be. This is a false
-calculation. The contrary is true. For every old picture not sold,
-one of their own (in proportion) would <em>not</em> be sold. The practice of
-buying pictures is a habit, and it must begin with those pictures which
-have a character and name, and not with those which have none.
-‘Depend upon it,’ says Mr. Burke in a letter to Barry, ‘whatever
-attracts public attention to the Arts, will in the end be for the benefit of
-the Artists themselves.’ Again, do not the Academicians know, that
-it is a contradiction in terms, that a man should enjoy the advantages
-of posthumous fame in his lifetime? Most men cease to be of any
-consequence at all when they are dead; but it is the privilege of the
-man of genius to survive himself. But he cannot in the nature of
-things anticipate this privilege—because in all that appeals to the
-general intellect of mankind, this appeal is strengthened, as it spreads
-wider and is acknowledged; because a man cannot unite in himself
-personally the suffrages of distant ages and nations; because popularity,
-a newspaper puff, cannot have the certainty of lasting fame; because
-it does not carry the same weight of sympathy with it; because it
-cannot have the same interest, the same refinement or grandeur. If
-Mr. West was equal to Raphael, (which he is not), if Mr. Lawrence
-was equal to Vandyke or Titian, (which he is not), if Mr. Turner
-was equal to Claude Lorraine, (which he is not), if Mr. Wilkie was
-equal to Teniers, (which he is not), yet they could not, nor ought
-they to be thought of in the same manner, because there could not be
-the same proof of it, nor the same confidence in the opinion of a man
-and his friends, or of any one generation, as in that of successive
-generations and the voice of posterity. If it is said that we pass over
-the faults of the one, and severely scrutinise the excellences of the
-other; this is also right and necessary, because the one have passed
-their trial, and the others are upon it. If we forgive or overlook
-the faults of the ancients, it is because they have dearly earned it at
-our hands. We ought to have some objects to indulge our enthusiasm
-upon; and we ought to indulge it upon the highest, and those that are
-surest of deserving it. Would one of our Academicians expect us to
-look at his new house in one of the new squares with the same
-veneration as at Michael Angelo’s, which he built with his own hands,
-as at Tully’s villa, or at the tomb of Virgil? We have no doubt
-they would, but we cannot. Besides, if it were possible to transfer
-our old prejudices to new candidates, the way to effect this is not by
-destroying them. If we have no confidence in all that has gone
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>before us, in what has received the sanction of time and the concurring
-testimony of disinterested judges, are we to believe all of a sudden
-that excellence has started up in our own times, because it never
-existed before: are we to take the Artists’ own word for their
-superiority to their predecessors? There is one other plea made by
-the moderns, ‘that they must live,’ and the answer to it is, that
-they do live. An Academician makes his thousand a-year by portrait-painting,
-and complains that the encouragement given to foreign Art
-deprives him of the means of subsistence, and prevents him from
-indulging his genius in works of high history,—‘playing at will his
-virgin fancies wild.’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As to the comparative merits of the ancients and the moderns, it
-does not admit of a question. The odds are too much in favour of
-the former, because it is likely that more good pictures were painted
-in the last three hundred than in the last thirty years. Now, the old
-pictures are the best remaining out of all that period, setting aside
-those of living Artists. If they are bad, the Art itself is good for
-nothing; for they are the best that ever were. They are not good,
-because they are old; but they have become old, because they are
-good. The question is not between this and any other generation,
-but between the present and all preceding generations, whom the
-Catalogue-writer, in his misguided zeal, undertakes to vilify and ‘to
-keep under, or hold up to derision.’ To say that the great names
-which have come down to us are not worth any thing, is to say that
-the mountain-tops which we see in the farthest horizon are not so high
-as the intervening objects. If there had been any greater painters
-than Vandyke or Rubens, or Raphael or Rembrandt, or N. Poussin
-or Claude Lorraine, we should have heard of them, we should have
-seen them in the Gallery, and we should have read a patriotic and
-disinterested account of them in the <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Catalogue Raisonné</span></cite>. Waiving
-the unfair and invidious comparison between all former excellence
-and the concentrated essence of it in the present age, let us ask who,
-in the last generation of painters, was equal to the old masters? Was
-it Highmore, or Hayman, or Hudson, or Kneller? Who was the
-English Raphael, or Rubens, or Vandyke, of that day, to whom the
-Catalogue-critic would have extended his patriotic sympathy and
-damning patronage? Kneller, we have been told, was thought
-superior to Vandyke by the persons of fashion whom he painted. So
-St. Thomas Apostle seems higher than St. Paul’s while you are close
-under it; but the farther off you go the higher the mighty dome
-aspires into the skies. What is become of all those great men who
-flourished in our own time—‘like flowers in men’s caps, dying or ere
-they sicken’—Hoppner, Opie, Shee, Loutherbourg, Rigaud, Romney,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>Barry, the painters of the Shakspeare Gallery? ‘Gone to the vault
-of all the Capulets,’ and their pictures with them, or before them!
-Shall we put more faith in their successors? Shall we take the words
-of their friends for their taste and genius? No, we will stick to what
-we know will stick to us, the ‘heirlooms’ of the Art, the Black
-Masters. The picture, for instance, of Charles <span class='fss'>I.</span> on horseback, which
-our critic criticises with such heavy drollery, is worth all the pictures
-that were ever exhibited at the Royal Academy (from the time of
-Sir Joshua to the present time inclusive) put together. It shews
-more knowledge and feeling of the Art, more skill and beauty, more
-sense of what it is in objects that gives pleasure to the eye, with more
-power to communicate this pleasure to the world. If either this
-single picture, or all the lumber that has ever appeared at the Academy,
-were to be destroyed, there could not be a question which, with any
-Artist or with any judge or lover of Art. So stands the account
-between ancient and modern Art! By this we may judge of all the
-rest. The Catalogue-writer makes some strictures in the second part
-on the Waterloo Exhibition, which he does not think what it ought
-to be. We wonder he had another word to say on modern Art after
-seeing it. He should instantly have taken the resolution of <em>Iago</em>,
-‘From this time forth I never will speak more.’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The writer of the <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Catalogue Raisonné</span></cite> has fallen foul of two things
-which ought to be sacred to Artists and lovers of Art—Genius and
-Fame. If they are not sacred to them, we do not know to whom
-they will be sacred. A work such as the present shews that the
-person who could write it must either have no knowledge or taste
-for Art, or must be actuated by a feeling of unaccountable malignity
-towards it. It shews that any body of men by whom it could be
-set on foot or encouraged are not an Academy of Art. It shews that
-a country in which such a publication could make its appearance is
-not the country of the Fine Arts. Does the writer think to prove the
-genius of his countrymen for Art by proclaiming their utter insensibility
-and flagitious contempt for all beauty and excellence in the art,
-except in their own works? No! it is very true that the English
-are a shopkeeping nation; and the <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Catalogue Raisonné</span></cite> is the proof
-of it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Finally, the works of the moderns are not, like those of the Old
-Masters, a second nature. Oh Art, true likeness of nature, ‘balm of
-hurt minds, great nature’s second course, chief nourisher in life’s
-feast,’ of what would our Catalogue-mongers deprive us in depriving
-us of thee and of thy glories, of the lasting works of the great Painters,
-and of their names no less magnificent, grateful to our hearts as
-the sound of celestial harmony from other spheres, waking around us
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>(whether heard or not) from youth to age, the stay, the guide and
-anchor of our purest thoughts; whom, having once seen, we always
-remember, and who teach us to see all things through them; without
-whom life would be to begin again, and the earth barren; of Raphael,
-who lifted the human form half way to heaven; of Titian, who
-painted the mind in the face, and unfolded the soul of things to the
-eye; of Rubens, around whose pencil gorgeous shapes thronged
-numberless, startling us by the novel accidents of form and colour,
-putting the spirit of motion into the universe, and weaving a gay
-fantastic round and Bacchanalian dance with nature; of thee, too,
-Rembrandt, who didst redeem one half of nature from obloquy, from
-the nickname in the Catalogue, ‘smoothing the raven down of darkness
-till it smiled,’ and tinging it with a light like streaks of burnished
-ore; of these, and more, of whom the world is scarce worthy; and
-what would they give us in return? Nothing.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>W. H.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>No. 37.</span>]&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; ON POETICAL VERSATILITY&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; [<span class='sc'>Dec. 22, 1816.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>The spirit of poetry is in itself favourable to humanity and liberty:
-but, we suspect, not when its aid is most wanted. The spirit of
-poetry is not the spirit of mortification or of martyrdom. Poetry
-dwells in a perpetual Utopia of its own, and is for that reason very
-ill calculated to make a Paradise upon earth, by encountering the
-shocks and disappointments of the world. Poetry, like law, is a
-fiction, only a more agreeable one. It does not create difficulties
-where they do not exist; but contrives to get rid of them, whether
-they exist or not. It is not entangled in cobwebs of its own making,
-but soars above all obstacles. It cannot be ‘constrained by mastery.’
-It has the range of the universe; it traverses the empyrean, and looks
-down on nature from a higher sphere. When it lights upon the
-earth, it loses some of its dignity and its use. Its strength is in its
-wings; its element the air. Standing on its feet, jostling with the
-crowd, it is liable to be overthrown, trampled on, and defaced; for
-its wings are of a dazzling brightness, ‘heaven’s own tinct,’ and the
-least soil upon them shews to disadvantage. Sullied, degraded as
-we have seen it, we shall not insult over it, but leave it to Time to
-take out the stains, seeing it is a thing immortal as itself. ‘Being
-so majestical, we should do it wrong to offer it the show of violence.’
-But the best things, in their abuse, often become the worst; and so
-it is with poetry when it is diverted from its proper end. Poets live
-in an ideal world, where they make everything out according to their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>wishes and fancies. They either find things delightful or make them
-so. They feign the beautiful and grand out of their own minds, and
-imagine all things to be, not what they are, but what they ought to
-be. They are naturally inventors, creators of truth, of love, and
-beauty: and while they speak to us from the sacred shrine of their
-own hearts, while they pour out the pure treasures of thought to the
-world, they cannot be too much admired and applauded: but when,
-forgetting their high calling, and becoming tools and puppets in the
-hands of power, they would pass off the gewgaws of corruption and
-love-tokens of self-interest as the gifts of the Muse, they cannot be
-too much despised and shunned. We do not like novels founded on
-facts, nor do we like poets turned courtiers. Poets, it has been said,
-succeed best in fiction: and they should for the most part stick to it.
-Invention, not upon an imaginary subject, is a lie: the varnishing
-over the vices or deformities of actual objects is hypocrisy. Players
-leave their finery at the stage-door, or they would be hooted; poets
-come out into the world with all their bravery on, and yet they
-would pass for <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">bona fide</span></i> persons. They lend the colours of fancy to
-whatever they see: whatever they touch becomes gold, though it
-were lead. With them every Joan is a lady; and kings and queens
-are human. Matters of fact they embellish at their will, and reason
-is the plaything of their passions, their caprice, or their interest.
-There is no practice so base of which they will not become the
-panders: no sophistry of which their understanding may not be made
-the voluntary dupe. Their only object is to please their fancy.
-Their souls are effeminate, half man and half woman:—they want
-fortitude, and are without principle. If things do not turn out according
-to their wishes, they will make their wishes turn round to things.
-They can easily overlook whatever they do not like, and make an
-idol of any thing they please. The object of poetry is to please: this
-art naturally gives pleasure, and excites admiration. Poets, therefore,
-cannot do well without sympathy and flattery. It is accordingly
-very much against the grain that they remain long on the unpopular
-side of the question. They do not like to be shut out when laurels
-are to be given away at Court—or places under Government to be
-disposed of, in romantic situations in the country. They are happy
-to be reconciled on the first opportunity to prince and people, and to
-exchange their principles for a pension. They have not always
-strength of mind to think for themselves, nor courage enough to bear
-the unjust stigma of the opinions they have taken upon trust from
-others. Truth alone does not satisfy their pampered appetites without
-the sauce of praise. To prefer truth to all other things, it
-requires that the mind should have been at some pains in finding it
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>out, and that we should feel a severe delight in the contemplation of
-truth, seen by its own clear light, and not as it is reflected in the
-admiring eyes of the world. A philosopher may perhaps make a
-shift to be contented with the sober draughts of reason: a poet must
-have the applause of the world to intoxicate him. Milton was,
-however, a poet, and an honest man; he was Cromwell’s secretary.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>T. T.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>No. 38.</span>]&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; ON ACTORS AND ACTING&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; [<span class='sc'>Jan. 5, 1817.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>Players are ‘the abstracts and brief chronicles of the time’; the
-motley representatives of human nature. They are the only honest
-hypocrites. Their life is a voluntary dream; a studied madness.
-The height of their ambition is to be <em>beside themselves</em>. To-day kings,
-to-morrow beggars, it is only when they are themselves, that they are
-nothing. Made up of mimic laughter and tears, passing from the
-extremes of joy or woe at the prompter’s call, they wear the livery
-of other men’s fortunes; their very thoughts are not their own.
-They are, as it were, train-bearers in the pageant of life, and hold a
-glass up to humanity, frailer than itself. We see ourselves at second-hand
-in them: they shew us all that we are, all that we wish to be,
-and all that we dread to be. The stage is an epitome, a bettered
-likeness of the world, with the dull part left out: and, indeed, with
-this omission, it is nearly big enough to hold all the rest. What
-brings the resemblance nearer is, that, as <em>they</em> imitate us, we, in our
-turn, imitate them. How many fine gentlemen do we owe to the
-stage? How many romantic lovers are mere Romeos in masquerade?
-How many soft bosoms have heaved with Juliet’s sighs? They
-teach us when to laugh and when to weep, when to love and when to
-hate, upon principle and with a good grace! Wherever there is a
-play-house, the world will go on not amiss. The stage not only
-refines the manners, but it is the best teacher of morals, for it is the
-truest and most intelligible picture of life. It stamps the image of
-virtue on the mind by first softening the rude materials of which it is
-composed, by a sense of pleasure. It regulates the passions by giving
-a loose to the imagination. It points out the selfish and depraved to
-our detestation, the amiable and generous to our admiration; and if
-it clothes the more seductive vices with the borrowed graces of wit
-and fancy, even those graces operate as a diversion to the coarser
-poison of experience and bad example, and often prevent or carry off
-the infection by inoculating the mind with a certain taste and elegance.
-To shew how little we agree with the common declamations against
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>the immoral tendency of the stage on this score, we will hazard a
-conjecture, that the acting of the Beggar’s Opera a certain number of
-nights every year since it was first brought out, has done more towards
-putting down the practice of highway robbery, than all the gibbets that
-ever were erected. A person, after seeing this piece is too deeply
-imbued with a sense of humanity, is in too good humour with himself
-and the rest of the world, to set about cutting throats or rifling
-pockets. Whatever makes a jest of vice, leaves it too much a matter
-of indifference for any one in his senses to rush desperately on his
-ruin for its sake. We suspect that just the contrary effect must be
-produced by the representation of George Barnwell, which is too
-much in the style of the Ordinary’s sermon to meet with any better
-success. The mind, in such cases, instead of being deterred by the
-alarming consequences held out to it, revolts against the denunciation
-of them as an insult offered to its free-will, and, in a spirit of defiance,
-returns a practical answer to them, by daring the worst that can
-happen. The most striking lesson ever read to levity and licentiousness,
-is in the last act of the Inconstant, where young Mirabel is
-preserved by the fidelity of his mistress, Orinda, in the disguise of a
-page, from the hands of assassins, into whose power he has been
-allured by the temptations of vice and beauty. There never was a
-rake who did not become in imagination a reformed man, during the
-representation of the last trying scenes of this admirable comedy.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>If the stage is useful as a school of instruction, it is no less so as
-a source of amusement. It is the source of the greatest enjoyment at
-the time, and a never-failing fund of agreeable reflection afterwards.
-The merits of a new play, or of a new actor, are always among the
-first topics of polite conversation. One way in which public exhibitions
-contribute to refine and humanise mankind, is by supplying them
-with ideas and subjects of conversation and interest in common. The
-progress of civilisation is in proportion to the number of common-places
-current in society. For instance, if we meet with a stranger
-at an inn or in a stage-coach, who knows nothing but his own affairs,
-his shop, his customers, his farm, his pigs, his poultry, we can carry
-on no conversation with him on these local and personal matters: the
-only way is to let him have all the talk to himself. But if he has
-fortunately ever seen Mr. Liston act, this is an immediate topic of
-mutual conversation, and we agree together the rest of the evening in
-discussing the merits of that inimitable actor, with the same satisfaction
-as in talking over the affairs of the most intimate friend.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>If the stage thus introduces us familiarly to our contemporaries, it
-also brings us acquainted with former times. It is an interesting
-revival of past ages, manners, opinions, dresses, persons, and actions,—whether
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>it carries us back to the wars of York and Lancaster, or
-half way back to the heroic times of Greece and Rome, in some
-translation from the French, or quite back to the age of Charles <span class='fss'>II.</span>
-in the scenes of Congreve and of Etherege, (the gay Sir George!)—happy
-age, when kings and nobles led purely ornamental lives; when
-the utmost stretch of a morning’s study went no further than the
-choice of a sword-knot, or the adjustment of a side-curl; when the
-soul spoke out in all the pleasing eloquence of dress; and beaux and
-belles, enamoured of themselves in one another’s follies, fluttered like
-gilded butterflies in giddy mazes through the walks of St. James’s
-Park!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A good company of comedians, a Theatre-Royal judiciously managed,
-is your true Herald’s College; the only Antiquarian Society, that is
-worth a rush. It is for this reason that there is such an air of
-romance about players, and that it is pleasanter to see them, even in
-their own persons, than any of the three learned professions. We
-feel more respect for John Kemble in a plain coat, than for the Lord
-Chancellor on the woolsack. He is surrounded, to our eyes, with
-a greater number of imposing recollections: he is a more reverend
-piece of formality; a more complicated tissue of costume. We do
-not know whether to look upon this accomplished actor as Pierre or
-King John or Coriolanus or Cato or Leontes or the Stranger. But
-we see in him a stately hieroglyphic of humanity; a living monument
-of departed greatness, a sombre comment on the rise and fall of
-kings. We look after him till he is out of sight, as we listen to a
-story of one of Ossian’s heroes, to ‘a tale of other times!’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>One of the most affecting things we know is to see a favourite
-actor take leave of the stage. We were present not long ago when
-Mr. Bannister quitted it. We do not wonder that his feelings were
-overpowered on the occasion: ours were nearly so too. We remembered
-him, in the first heyday of our youthful spirits, in the
-<cite>Prize</cite>, in which he played so delightfully with that fine old croaker
-Suett, and Madame Storace,—in the farce of <cite>My Grandmother</cite>, in the
-<cite>Son-in-Law</cite>, in <cite>Autolycus</cite>, and in <cite>Scrub</cite>, in which our satisfaction was
-at its height. At that time, King and Parsons, and Dodd, and
-Quick, and Edwin were in the full vigour of their reputation, who
-are now all gone. We still feel the vivid delight with which we
-used to see their names in the play-bills, as we went along to the
-Theatre. Bannister was one of the last of these that remained; and
-we parted with him as we should with one of our oldest and best
-friends. The most pleasant feature in the profession of a player, and
-which, indeed, is peculiar to it, is that we not only admire the talents
-of those who adorn it, but we contract a personal intimacy with them.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>There is no class of society whom so many persons regard with
-affection as actors. We greet them on the stage; we like to meet
-them in the streets; they almost always recall to us pleasant associations;
-and we feel our gratitude excited, without the uneasiness of a
-sense of obligation. The very gaiety and popularity, however, which
-surround the life of a favourite performer, make the retiring from it
-a very serious business. It glances a mortifying reflection on the
-shortness of human life, and the vanity of human pleasures. Something
-reminds us, that ‘all the world’s a stage, and all the men and
-women merely players.’</p>
-
-<h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>No. 39.</span>]&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; ON THE SAME&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; [<span class='sc'>Jan. 5, 1817.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>It has been considered as the misfortune of first-rate talents for the
-stage, that they leave no record behind them except that of vague
-rumour, and that the genius of a great actor perishes with him,
-‘leaving the world no copy.’ This is a misfortune, or at least an
-unpleasant circumstance, to actors; but it is, perhaps, an advantage
-to the stage. It leaves an opening to originality. The stage is
-always beginning anew; the candidates for theatrical reputation are
-always setting out afresh, unencumbered by the affectation of the
-faults or excellences of their predecessors. In this respect, we
-should imagine that the average quantity of dramatic talent remains
-more nearly the same than that in any other walk of art. In no
-other instance do the complaints of the degeneracy of the moderns
-seem so unfounded as in this; and Colley Cibber’s account of the
-regular decline of the stage, from the time of Shakspeare to that of
-Charles <span class='fss'>II.</span>, and from the time of Charles <span class='fss'>II.</span> to the beginning of
-George <span class='fss'>II.</span> appears quite ridiculous. The stage is a place where
-genius is sure to come upon its legs, in a generation or two at farthest.
-In the other arts, (as painting and poetry), it has been contended that
-what has been well done already, by giving rise to endless vapid
-imitations, is an obstacle to what might be done well hereafter: that
-the models or <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">chef-d’œuvres</span></span></i> of art, where they are accumulated, choke
-up the path to excellence; and that the works of genius, where they
-can be rendered permanent and handed down from age to age, not
-only prevent, but render superfluous, future productions of the same
-kind. We have not, neither do we want, two Shakspeares, two
-Miltons, two Raphaels, any more than we require two suns in the
-same sphere. Even Miss O’Neill stands a little in the way of our
-recollections of Mrs. Siddons. But Mr. Kean is an excellent substitute
-for the memory of Garrick, whom we never saw. When an
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>author dies, it is no matter, for his works remain. When a great
-actor dies, there is a void produced in society, a gap which requires
-to be filled up. Who does not go to see Kean? Who, if Garrick
-were alive, would go to see him? At least one or the other must
-have quitted the stage. We have seen what a ferment has been
-excited among our living artists by the exhibition of the works of the
-old Masters at the British Gallery. What would the actors say to
-it, if, by any spell or power of necromancy, all the celebrated actors,
-for the last hundred years could be made to appear again on the boards
-of Covent Garden and Drury-Lane, for the last time, in all their
-most brilliant parts? What a rich treat to the town, what a feast
-for the critics, to go and see Betterton, and Booth, and Wilks, and
-Sandford, and Nokes, and Leigh, and Penkethman, and Bullock, and
-Estcourt, and Dogget, and Mrs. Barry, and Mrs. Montfort, and
-Mrs. Oldfield, and Mrs. Bracegirdle, and Mrs. Cibber, and Cibber
-himself, the prince of coxcombs, and Macklin, and Quin, and Rich,
-and Mrs. Clive, and Mrs. Pritchard, and Mrs. Abington, and Weston,
-and Shuter, and Garrick, and all the rest of those who ‘gladdened
-life, and whose deaths eclipsed the gaiety of nations’! We should
-certainly be there. We should buy a ticket for the season. We
-should enjoy <em>our hundred days</em> again. We should not lose a single
-night. We would not, for a great deal, be absent from Betterton’s
-Hamlet or his Brutus, or from Booth’s Cato, as it was first acted to
-the contending applause of Whigs and Tories. We should be in the
-first row when Mrs. Barry (who was kept by Lord Rochester, and
-with whom Otway was in love) played Monimia or Belvidera; and
-we suppose we should go to see Mrs. Bracegirdle (with whom all
-the world was in love) in all her parts. We should then know
-exactly whether Penkethman’s manner of picking a chicken, and
-Bullock’s mode of devouring asparagus, answered to the ingenious
-account of them in the Tatler; and whether Dogget was equal to
-Dowton—whether Mrs. Montfort<a id='r63' /><a href='#f63' class='c012'><sup>[63]</sup></a> or Mrs. Abington was the finest
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>lady—whether Wilks or Cibber was the best Sir Harry Wildair—whether
-Macklin was really ‘the Jew that Shakspeare drew,’ and
-whether Garrick was, upon the whole, so great an actor as the world
-have made him out! Many people have a strong desire to pry into
-the secrets of futurity: for our own parts, we should be satisfied if
-we had the power to recall the dead, and live the past over again
-as often as we pleased! Players, after all, have little reason to complain
-of their hard-earned, short-lived popularity. One thunder of
-applause from pit, boxes, and gallery, is equal to a whole immortality
-of posthumous fame: and when we hear an actor, whose modesty is
-equal to his merit, declare, that he would like to see a dog wag his
-tail in approbation, what must he feel when he sees the whole house
-in a roar! Besides, Fame, as if their reputation had been entrusted
-to her alone, has been particularly careful of the renown of her
-theatrical favourites: she forgets one by one, and year by year, those
-who have been great lawyers, great statesmen, and great warriors in
-their day; but the name of Garrick still survives with the works of
-Reynolds and of Johnson.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Actors have been accused, as a profession, of being extravagant
-and dissipated. While they are said to be so as a piece of common
-cant, they are likely to continue so. But there is a sentence in
-Shakspeare which should be stuck as a label in the mouths of our
-beadles and whippers-in of morality: ‘The web of our life is of a
-mingled yarn, good and ill together: our virtues would be proud if
-our faults whipped them not: and our vices would despair if they
-were not cherished by our virtues.’ With respect to the extravagance
-of actors, as a traditional character, it is not to be wondered
-at. They live from hand to mouth: they plunge from want into
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>luxury; they have no means of making money <em>breed</em>, and all professions
-that do not live by turning money into money, or have not
-a certainty of accumulating it in the end by parsimony, spend it.
-Uncertain of the future, they make sure of the present moment.
-This is not unwise. Chilled with poverty, steeped in contempt, they
-sometimes pass into the sunshine of fortune, and are lifted to the very
-pinnacle of public favour; yet even there cannot calculate on the
-continuance of success, but are, ‘like the giddy sailor on the mast,
-ready with every blast to topple down into the fatal bowels of the
-deep!’ Besides, if the young enthusiast, who is smitten with the
-stage, and with the public as a mistress, were naturally a close <em>hunks</em>,
-he would become or remain a city clerk, instead of turning player.
-Again, with respect to the habit of convivial indulgence, an actor,
-to be a good one, must have a great spirit of enjoyment in himself,
-strong impulses, strong passions, and a strong sense of pleasure: for
-it is his business to imitate the passions, and to communicate pleasure
-to others. A man of genius is not a machine. The neglected actor
-may be excused if he drinks oblivion of his disappointments; the
-successful one, if he quaffs the applause of the world, and enjoys the
-friendship of those who are the friends of the favourites of fortune,
-in draughts of nectar. There is no path so steep as that of fame:
-no labour so hard as the pursuit of excellence. The intellectual
-excitement, inseparable from those professions which call forth all
-our sensibility to pleasure and pain, requires some corresponding
-physical excitement to support our failure, and not a little to allay
-the ferment of the spirits attendant on success. If there is any
-tendency to dissipation beyond this in the profession of a player,
-it is owing to the prejudices entertained against them, to that spirit of
-bigotry which in a neighbouring country would deny actors Christian
-burial after their death, and to that cant of criticism, which, in our
-own, slurs over their characters, while living, with a half-witted jest.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A London engagement is generally considered by actors as the
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">ne plus ultra</span></i> of their ambition, as ‘a consummation devoutly to be
-wished,’ as the great prize in the lottery of their professional life.
-But this appears to us, who are not in the secret, to be rather the
-prose termination of their adventurous career: it is the provincial
-commencement that is the poetical and truly enviable part of it.
-After that, they have comparatively little to hope or fear. ‘The
-wine of life is drunk, and but the lees remain.’ In London, they
-become gentlemen, and the King’s servants: but it is the romantic
-mixture of the hero and the vagabond that constitutes the essence of
-the player’s life. It is the transition from their real to their assumed
-characters, from the contempt of the world to the applause of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>multitude, that gives its zest to the latter, and raises them as much
-above common humanity at night, as in the daytime they are depressed
-below it. ‘Hurried from fierce extremes, by contrast made more
-fierce,’—it is rags and a flock-bed which give their splendour to a
-plume of feathers and a throne. We should suppose, that if the
-most admired actor on the London stage were brought to confession
-on this point, he would acknowledge that all the applause he had
-received from ‘brilliant and overflowing audiences,’ was nothing to
-the light-headed intoxication of unlooked-for success in a barn. In
-town, actors are criticised: in country-places, they are wondered at,
-or hooted at: it is of little consequence which, so that the interval
-is not too long between. For ourselves, we own that the description
-of the strolling player in Gil Blas, soaking his dry crusts in the well
-by the roadside, presents to us a perfect picture of human felicity.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>W. H.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>No. 40.</span>]&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; WHY THE ARTS ARE NOT PROGRESSIVE?—A FRAGMENT&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; [<span class='sc'>Jan. 11, 15; Sep. 11, 1814.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>It is often made a subject of complaint and surprise, that the arts in
-this country, and in modern times, have not kept pace with the general
-progress of society and civilisation in other respects, and it has been
-proposed to remedy the deficiency by more carefully availing ourselves
-of the advantages which time and circumstances have placed within
-our reach, but which we have hitherto neglected, the study of the
-antique, the formation of academies, and the distribution of prizes.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>First, the complaint itself, that the arts do not attain that progressive
-degree of perfection which might reasonably be expected
-from them, proceeds on a false notion, for the analogy appealed to in
-support of the regular advances of art to higher degrees of excellence,
-totally fails; it applies to science, not to art. Secondly, the
-expedients proposed to remedy the evil by adventitious means are only
-calculated to confirm it. The arts hold immediate communication
-with nature, and are only derived from that source. When that
-original impulse no longer exists, when the inspiration of genius is fled,
-all the attempts to recal it are no better than the tricks of galvanism
-to restore the dead to life. The arts may be said to resemble Antæus
-in his struggle with Hercules, who was strangled when he was raised
-above the ground, and only revived and recovered his strength when
-he touched his mother earth.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>Nothing is more contrary to the fact than the supposition that in
-what we understand by the <em>fine arts</em>, as painting and poetry, relative
-perfection is only the result of repeated efforts, and that what has
-been once well done constantly leads to something better. What is
-mechanical, reducible to rule, or capable of demonstration, is progressive,
-and admits of gradual improvement: what is not mechanical
-or definite, but depends on genius, taste, and feeling, very soon
-becomes stationary or retrograde, and loses more than it gains by
-transfusion. The contrary opinion is, indeed, a common error, which
-has grown up, like many others, from transferring an analogy of one
-kind to something quite distinct, without thinking of the difference in
-the nature of the things, or attending to the difference of the results.
-For most persons, finding what wonderful advances have been made in
-biblical criticism, in chemistry, in mechanics, in geometry, astronomy,
-etc.—<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">i.e.</span></i>, in things depending on mere inquiry and experiment, or on
-absolute demonstration, have been led hastily to conclude, that there
-was a general tendency in the efforts of the human intellect to improve
-by repetition, and in all other arts and institutions to grow perfect and
-mature by time. We look back upon the theological creed of our
-ancestors, and their discoveries in natural philosophy, with a smile of
-pity; science, and the arts connected with it, have all had their
-infancy, their youth, and manhood, and seem to have in them no
-principle of limitation or decay; and, inquiring no farther about the
-matter, we infer, in the height of our self-congratulation, and in the
-intoxication of our pride, that the same progress has been, and will
-continue to be, made in all other things which are the work of man.
-The fact, however, stares us so plainly in the face, that one would
-think the smallest reflection must suggest the truth, and overturn our
-sanguine theories. The greatest poets, the ablest orators, the best
-painters, and the finest sculptors that the world ever saw, appeared
-soon after the birth of these arts, and lived in a state of society which
-was, in other respects, comparatively barbarous. Those arts, which
-depend on individual genius and incommunicable power, have always
-leaped at once from infancy to manhood, from the first rude dawn of invention
-to their meridian height and dazzling lustre, and have in general
-declined ever after. This is the peculiar distinction and privilege of
-each, of science and of art; of the one, never to attain its utmost
-summit of perfection, and of the other, to arrive at it almost at once.
-Homer, Chaucer, Spenser, Shakspeare, Dante, and Ariosto (Milton
-alone was of a later age, and not the worse for it), Raphael, Titian,
-Michael Angelo, Correggio, Cervantes, and Boccaccio—all lived
-near the beginning of their arts—perfected, and all but created them.
-These giant sons of genius stand, indeed, upon the earth, but they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span>tower above their fellows, and the long line of their successors does
-not interpose any thing to obstruct their view, or lessen their brightness.
-In strength and stature they are unrivalled, in grace and beauty they
-have never been surpassed. In after-ages, and more refined periods, (as
-they are called), great men have arisen one by one, as it were by
-throes and at intervals: though in general the best of these cultivated
-and artificial minds were of an inferior order, as Tasso and Pope
-among poets, Guido and Vandyke among painters. But in the
-earliest stages of the arts, when the first mechanical difficulties had
-been got over, and the language as it were acquired, they rose by
-clusters and in constellations, never to rise again.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The arts of painting and poetry are conversant with the world of
-thought within us, and with the world of sense without us—with what
-we know, and see, and feel intimately. They flow from the sacred
-shrine of our own breasts, and are kindled at the living lamp of nature.
-The pulse of the passions assuredly beat as high, the depths and
-soundings of the human heart were as well understood three thousand
-years ago, as they are at present; the face of nature and ‘the human
-face divine,’ shone as bright then as they have ever done. It is this
-light, reflected by true genius on art, that marks out its path before it,
-and sheds a glory round the Muses’ feet, like that which ‘circled
-Una’s angel face,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘And made a sunshine in the shady place.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Nature is the soul of art. There is a strength in the imagination that
-reposes entirely on nature, which nothing else can supply. There is
-in the old poets and painters a vigour and grasp of mind, a full
-possession of their subject, a confidence and firm faith, a sublime
-simplicity, an elevation of thought, proportioned to their depth of
-feeling, an increasing force and impetus, which moves, penetrates, and
-kindles all that comes in contact with it, which seems, not theirs, but
-given to them. It is this reliance on the power of nature which has
-produced those master-pieces by the Prince of Painters, in which
-expression is all in all, where one spirit, that of truth, pervades every
-part, brings down heaven to earth, mingles cardinals and popes with
-angels and apostles, and yet blends and harmonises the whole by the
-true touches and intense feeling of what is beautiful and grand in
-nature. It was the same trust in nature that enabled Chaucer to
-describe the patient sorrow of Griselda; or the delight of that young
-beauty in the Flower and the Leaf, shrouded in her bower, and listening,
-in the morning of the year, to the singing of the nightingale, while her
-joy rises with the rising song, and gushes out afresh at every pause,
-and is borne along with the full tide of pleasure, and still increases
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>and repeats and prolongs itself, and knows no ebb. It is thus that
-Boccaccio, in the divine story of the Hawk, has represented Frederigo
-Alberigi steadily contemplating his favourite Falcon (the wreck and
-remnant of his fortune), and glad to see how fat and fair a bird she is,
-thinking what a dainty repast she would make for his Mistress, who
-had deigned to visit him in his low cell. So Isabella mourns over
-her pot of Basile, and never asks for any thing but that. So Lear
-calls out for his poor fool, and invokes the heavens, for they are old
-like him. So Titian impressed on the countenance of that young
-Neapolitan nobleman in the Louvre, a look that never passed away.
-So Nicolas Poussin describes some shepherds wandering out in a
-morning of the spring, and coming to a tomb with this inscription, ‘<span class='sc'>I
-also was an Arcadian</span>.’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In general, it must happen in the first stages of the Arts, that as
-none but those who had a natural genius for them would attempt to
-practise them, so none but those who had a natural taste for them
-would pretend to judge of or criticise them. This must be an
-incalculable advantage to the man of true genius, for it is no other
-than the privilege of being tried by his peers. In an age when
-connoisseurship had not become a fashion; when religion, war, and
-intrigue, occupied the time and thoughts of the great, only those minds
-of superior refinement would be led to notice the works of art, who
-had a real sense of their excellence; and in giving way to the powerful
-bent of his own genius, the painter was most likely to consult the
-taste of his judges. He had not to deal with pretenders to taste,
-through vanity, affectation, and idleness. He had to appeal to the
-higher faculties of the soul; to that deep and innate sensibility to
-truth and beauty, which required only a proper object to have its
-enthusiasm excited; and to that independent strength of mind, which,
-in the midst of ignorance and barbarism, hailed and fostered genius,
-wherever it met with it. Titian was patronised by Charles <span class='fss'>V.</span>, Count
-Castiglione was the friend of Raphael. These were true patrons, and
-true critics; and as there were no others, (for the world, in general,
-merely looked on and wondered), there can be little doubt, that such
-a period of dearth of factitious patronage would be the most favourable
-to the full developement of the greatest talents, and the attainment of
-the highest excellence.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The diffusion of taste is not the same thing as the improvement of
-taste; but it is only the former of these objects that is promoted by
-public institutions and other artificial means. The number of candidates
-for fame, and of pretenders to criticism, is thus increased beyond
-all proportion, while the quantity of genius and feeling remains the
-same; with this difference, that the man of genius is lost in the crowd
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>of competitors, who would never have become such but from encouragement
-and example; and that the opinion of those few persons
-whom nature intended for judges, is drowned in the noisy suffrages of
-shallow smatterers in taste. The principle of universal suffrage, however
-applicable to matters of government, which concern the common
-feelings and common interests of society, is by no means applicable to
-matters of taste, which can only be decided upon by the most refined
-understandings. The highest efforts of genius, in every walk of art,
-can never be properly understood by the generality of mankind: There
-are numberless beauties and truths which lie far beyond their comprehension.
-It is only as refinement and sublimity are blended with
-other qualities of a more obvious and grosser nature, that they pass
-current with the world. Taste is the highest degree of sensibility,
-or the impression made on the most cultivated and sensible of minds,
-as genius is the result of the highest powers both of feeling and
-invention. It may be objected, that the public taste is capable of
-gradual improvement, because, in the end, the public do justice to
-works of the greatest merit. This is a mistake. The reputation
-ultimately, and often slowly affixed to works of genius is stamped
-upon them by authority, not by popular consent or the common sense
-of the world. We imagine that the admiration of the works of
-celebrated men has become common, because the admiration of their
-names has become so. But does not every ignorant connoisseur
-pretend the same veneration, and talk with the same vapid assurance of
-Michael Angelo, though he has never seen even a copy of any of his
-pictures, as if he had studied them accurately,—merely because Sir
-Joshua Reynolds has praised him? Is Milton more popular now
-than when the Paradise Lost was first published? Or does he
-not rather owe his reputation to the judgment of a few persons in
-every successive period, accumulating in his favour, and overpowering
-by its weight the public indifference? Why is Shakspeare popular?
-Not from his refinement of character or sentiment, so much as from
-his power of telling a story, the variety and invention, the tragic
-catastrophe and broad farce of his plays. Spenser is not yet understood.
-Does not Boccaccio pass to this day for a writer of ribaldry,
-because his jests and lascivious tales were all that caught the vulgar
-ear, while the story of the Falcon is forgotten!</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>W. H.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div>End of <span class='sc'>The Round Table</span>.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHARACTERS OF SHAKESPEAR’S PLAYS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_166'>166</span>
- <h3 class='c010'>BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>The first edition of the <cite>Characters of Shakespear’s Plays</cite> (5½ in. × 9 in.) was
-published in 1817. The imprint reads thus:—London: | Printed by C. H.
-Reynell, 21, Piccadilly, | for R. Hunter, successor to Mr. Johnson, | in St. Paul’s
-Church-yard; | and C. and J. Ollier, | Welbeck-street, Cavendish-square. | 1817.
-The second edition was issued in the following year, and the imprint is:—London: |
-Printed for Taylor and Hessey, | 93, Fleet Street. | 1818. There are several
-verbal alterations in the second edition, and one curious <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">erratum</span></i>: ‘In <cite>Lear</cite>, p. 173
-[p. 269 present edition] dele line “Not an hour more nor less.’” In the text of
-the play these words occur between ‘Fourscore and upward’ and ‘And, to deal
-plainly.’ The second edition also was printed by C. H. Reynell, Broad-street,
-Golden-square. No further edition was published in Hazlitt’s lifetime, and the
-present issue has consequently been printed from a copy of the second edition:
-the proofs, however, have been read with a copy of the first edition, and one or
-two misprints thereby corrected. In 1818 a pirated American edition was published
-at Boston.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A contemporary criticism of the volume may be found in the <cite>Edinburgh Review</cite>,
-1817, by Francis Jeffrey. See also E. L. Bulwer’s <cite>Some Thoughts on the Genius of
-Hazlitt</cite>. One hundred pounds was paid to Hazlitt by C. H. Reynell for the
-copyright, and the first edition, at half a guinea, was sold in six weeks: an adverse
-criticism by William Gifford in the <cite>Quarterly Review</cite> (No. 36, January 1818)
-spoiled the sale of the second edition.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The following announcement appears on the back of the half-title of the
-second edition:—‘This day is published, Lectures on the English Poets, delivered
-at the Surry Institution, By William Hazlitt. In one vol. 8vo. price 10s. 6d.’</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c001'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>TO</div>
- <div class='c004'>CHARLES LAMB, ESQ.</div>
- <div class='c004'>THIS VOLUME IS INSCRIBED, AS A MARK OF</div>
- <div class='c004'>OLD FRIENDSHIP</div>
- <div class='c004'>AND LASTING ESTEEM,</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='c017'>BY THE AUTHOR.</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>
- <h3 class='c010'>CONTENTS</h3>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table1' summary='CONTENTS'>
- <tr>
- <th class='c006'></th>
- <th class='c007'>PAGE</th>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Preface</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_171'>171</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Cymbeline</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_179'>179</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Macbeth</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_186'>186</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Julius Cæsar</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_195'>195</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Othello</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_200'>200</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Timon of Athens</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_210'>210</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Coriolanus</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_214'>214</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Troilus and Cressida</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_221'>221</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Antony and Cleopatra</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_228'>228</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Hamlet</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_232'>232</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>The Tempest</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_238'>238</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>The Midsummer Night’s Dream</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_244'>244</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Romeo and Juliet</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_248'>248</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Lear</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_257'>257</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Richard II.</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_272'>272</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Henry IV. in Two Parts</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_277'>277</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Henry V.</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_285'>285</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Henry VI. in Three Parts</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_292'>292</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Richard III.</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_298'>298</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Henry VIII.</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_303'>303</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>King John</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_306'>306</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Twelfth Night; or, What You Will</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_313'>313</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>The Two Gentlemen of Verona</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_318'>318</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>The Merchant of Venice</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_320'>320</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>The Winter’s Tale</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_324'>324</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>All’s Well that Ends Well</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_329'>329</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Love’s Labour’s Lost</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_332'>332</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Much Ado About Nothing</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_335'>335</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span>As You Like It</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_338'>338</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>The Taming of the Shrew</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_341'>341</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Measure for Measure</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_345'>345</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>The Merry Wives of Windsor</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_349'>349</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>The Comedy of Errors</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_351'>351</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Doubtful Plays of Shakespear</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_353'>353</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Poems and Sonnets</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_357'>357</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>
- <h3 class='c010'>PREFACE</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>It is observed by Mr. Pope, that</p>
-
-<p class='c016'>‘If ever any author deserved the name of an <em>original</em>, it was Shakespear.
-Homer himself drew not his art so immediately from the fountains of
-nature; it proceeded through Ægyptian strainers and channels, and came
-to him not without some tincture of the learning, or some cast of the
-models, of those before him. The poetry of Shakespear was inspiration
-indeed: he is not so much an imitator, as an instrument of nature; and it
-is not so just to say that he speaks from her, as that she speaks through
-him.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'>‘His <em>characters</em> are so much nature herself, that it is a sort of injury to
-call them by so distant a name as copies of her. Those of other poets
-have a constant resemblance, which shows that they received them from
-one another, and were but multipliers of the same image: each picture,
-like a mock-rainbow, is but the reflection of a reflection. But every single
-character in Shakespear, is as much an individual, as those in life itself;
-it is as impossible to find any two alike; and such, as from their relation
-or affinity in any respect appear most to be twins, will, upon comparison,
-be found remarkably distinct. To this life and variety of character, we
-must add the wonderful preservation of it; which is such throughout his
-plays, that had all the speeches been printed without the very names of
-the persons, I believe one might have applied them with certainty to every
-speaker.’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The object of the volume here offered to the public, is to illustrate
-these remarks in a more particular manner by a reference to each
-play. A gentleman of the name of Mason, the author of a Treatise
-on Ornamental Gardening (not Mason the poet), began a work of a
-similar kind about forty years ago, but he only lived to finish a
-parallel between the characters of Macbeth and Richard <span class='fss'>III.</span> which
-is an exceedingly ingenious piece of analytical criticism. Richardson’s
-Essays include but a few of Shakespear’s principal characters.
-The only work which seemed to supersede the necessity of an attempt
-like the present was Schlegel’s very admirable Lectures on the Drama,
-which give by far the best account of the plays of Shakespear that
-has hitherto appeared. The only circumstances in which it was
-thought not impossible to improve on the manner in which the German
-critic has executed this part of his design, were in avoiding an appearance
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>of mysticism in his style, not very attractive to the English
-reader, and in bringing illustrations from particular passages of the
-plays themselves, of which Schlegel’s work, from the extensiveness
-of his plan, did not admit. We will at the same time confess, that
-some little jealousy of the character of the national understanding was
-not without its share in producing the following undertaking, for ‘we
-were piqued’ that it should be reserved for a foreign critic to give
-‘reasons for the faith which we English have in Shakespear.’ Certainly
-no writer among ourselves has shown either the same enthusiastic
-admiration of his genius, or the same philosophical acuteness in
-pointing out his characteristic excellences. As we have pretty well
-exhausted all we had to say upon this subject in the body of the work,
-we shall here transcribe Schlegel’s general account of Shakespear,
-which is in the following words:—</p>
-
-<p class='c016'>‘Never, perhaps, was there so comprehensive a talent for the delineation
-of character as Shakespear’s. It not only grasps the diversities of rank,
-sex, and age, down to the dawnings of infancy; not only do the king and
-the beggar, the hero and the pickpocket, the sage and the idiot speak and
-act with equal truth; not only does he transport himself to distant ages
-and foreign nations, and pourtray in the most accurate manner, with only
-a few apparent violations of costume, the spirit of the ancient Romans, of
-the French in their wars with the English, of the English themselves
-during a great part of their history, of the Southern Europeans (in the
-serious part of many comedies) the cultivated society of that time, and the
-former rude and barbarous state of the North; his human characters have
-not only such depth and precision that they cannot be arranged under
-classes, and are inexhaustible, even in conception:—no—this Prometheus
-not merely forms men, he opens the gates of the magical world of spirits;
-calls up the midnight ghost; exhibits before us his witches amidst their
-unhallowed mysteries; peoples the air with sportive fairies and sylphs:—and
-these beings, existing only in imagination, possess such truth and
-consistency, that even when deformed monsters like Caliban, he extorts
-the conviction, that if there should be such beings, they would so conduct
-themselves. In a word, as he carries with him the most fruitful and
-daring fancy into the kingdom of nature,—on the other hand, he carries
-nature into the regions of fancy, lying beyond the confines of reality. We
-are lost in astonishment at seeing the extraordinary, the wonderful, and the
-unheard of, in such intimate nearness.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'>‘If Shakespear deserves our admiration for his characters, he is equally
-deserving of it for his exhibition of passion, taking this word in its widest
-signification, as including every mental condition, every tone from indifference
-or familiar mirth to the wildest rage and despair. He gives us the
-history of minds; he lays open to us, in a single word, a whole series of
-preceding conditions. His passions do not at first stand displayed to us
-in all their height, as is the case with so many tragic poets, who, in the
-language of Lessing, are thorough masters of the legal style of love. He
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>paints, in a most inimitable manner, the gradual progress from the first
-origin. “He gives,” as Lessing says, “a living picture of all the most
-minute and secret artifices by which a feeling steals into our souls; of all
-the imperceptible advantages which it there gains; of all the stratagems
-by which every other passion is made subservient to it, till it becomes the
-sole tyrant of our desires and our aversions.” Of all poets, perhaps, he
-alone has pourtrayed the mental diseases,—melancholy, delirium, lunacy,—with
-such inexpressible, and, in every respect, definite truth, that the
-physician may enrich his observations from them in the same manner as
-from real cases.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'>‘And yet Johnson has objected to Shakespear, that his pathos is not
-always natural and free from affectation. There are, it is true, passages,
-though, comparatively speaking, very few, where his poetry exceeds the
-bounds of true dialogue, where a too soaring imagination, a too luxuriant
-wit, rendered the complete dramatic forgetfulness of himself impossible.
-With this exception, the censure originates only in a fanciless way of
-thinking, to which everything appears unnatural that does not suit its own
-tame insipidity. Hence, an idea has been formed of simple and natural
-pathos, which consists in exclamations destitute of imagery, and nowise
-elevated above every-day life. But energetical passions electrify the whole
-of the mental powers, and will, consequently, in highly favoured natures,
-express themselves in an ingenious and figurative manner. It has been
-often remarked, that indignation gives wit; and, as despair occasionally
-breaks out into laughter, it may sometimes also give vent to itself in antithetical
-comparisons.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'>‘Besides, the rights of the poetical form have not been duly weighed.
-Shakespear, who was always sure of his object, to move in a sufficiently
-powerful manner when he wished to do so, has occasionally, by indulging
-in a freer play, purposely moderated the impressions when too painful, and
-immediately introduced a musical alleviation of our sympathy. He had
-not those rude ideas of his art which many moderns seem to have, as if the
-poet, like the clown in the proverb, must strike twice on the same place.
-An ancient rhetorician delivered a caution against dwelling too long on
-the excitation of pity; for nothing, he said, dries so soon as tears; and
-Shakespear acted conformably to this ingenious maxim, without knowing it.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'>‘The objection, that Shakespear wounds our feelings by the open display
-of the most disgusting moral odiousness, harrows up the mind unmercifully,
-and tortures even our senses by the exhibition of the most insupportable
-and hateful spectacles, is one of much greater importance. He has
-never, in fact, varnished over wild and bloodthirsty passions with a pleasing
-exterior,—never clothed crime and want of principle with a false show of
-greatness of soul; and in that respect he is every way deserving of praise.
-Twice he has pourtrayed downright villains; and the masterly way in
-which he has contrived to elude impressions of too painful a nature, may
-be seen in Iago and Richard the Third. The constant reference to a petty
-and puny race must cripple the boldness of the poet. Fortunately for his
-art, Shakespear lived in an age extremely susceptible of noble and tender
-impressions, but which had still enough of the firmness inherited from a
-vigorous olden time not to shrink back with dismay from every strong and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>violent picture. We have lived to see tragedies of which the catastrophe
-consists in the swoon of an enamoured princess. If Shakespear falls occasionally
-into the opposite extreme, it is a noble error, originating in the
-fulness of a gigantic strength: and yet this tragical Titan, who storms
-the heavens, and threatens to tear the world from off its hinges; who,
-more terrible than Æschylus, makes our hair stand on end, and congeals
-our blood with horror, possessed, at the same time, the insinuating loveliness
-of the sweetest poetry. He plays with love like a child; and his
-songs are breathed out like melting sighs. He unites in his genius the
-utmost elevation and the utmost depth; and the most foreign, and even
-apparently irreconcileable properties subsist in him peaceably together.
-The world of spirits and nature have laid all their treasures at his feet.
-In strength a demi-god, in profundity of view a prophet, in all-seeing
-wisdom a protecting spirit of a higher order, he lowers himself to mortals,
-as if unconscious of his superiority: and is as open and unassuming as a
-child.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'>‘Shakespear’s comic talent is equally wonderful with that which he has
-shown in the pathetic and tragic: it stands on an equal elevation, and
-possesses equal extent and profundity. All that I before wished was, not
-to admit that the former preponderated. He is highly inventive in comic
-situations and motives. It will be hardly possible to show whence he has
-taken any of them; whereas, in the serious part of his drama, he has
-generally laid hold of something already known. His comic characters
-are equally true, various, and profound, with his serious. So little is he
-disposed to caricature, that we may rather say many of his traits are almost
-too nice and delicate for the stage, that they can only be properly seized
-by a great actor, and fully understood by a very acute audience. Not only
-has he delineated many kinds of folly; he has also contrived to exhibit
-mere stupidity in a most diverting and entertaining manner.’—Vol. ii. p. 145.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>We have the rather availed ourselves of this testimony of a foreign
-critic in behalf of Shakespear, because our own countryman, Dr.
-Johnson, has not been so favourable to him. It may be said of
-Shakespear, that ‘those who are not for him are against him’: for
-indifference is here the height of injustice. We may sometimes, in
-order ‘to do a great right, do a little wrong.’ An overstrained
-enthusiasm is more pardonable with respect to Shakespear than the
-want of it; for our admiration cannot easily surpass his genius. We
-have a high respect for Dr. Johnson’s character and understanding,
-mixed with something like personal attachment: but he was neither
-a poet nor a judge of poetry. He might in one sense be a judge of
-poetry as it falls within the limits and rules of prose, but not as it is
-poetry. Least of all was he qualified to be a judge of Shakespear,
-who ‘alone is high fantastical.’ Let those who have a prejudice
-against Johnson read Boswell’s Life of him; as those whom he has
-prejudiced against Shakespear should read his Irene. We do not
-say that a man to be a critic must necessarily be a poet: but to be a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>good critic, he ought not to be a bad poet. Such poetry as a man
-deliberately writes, such, and such only will he like. Dr. Johnson’s
-Preface to his edition of Shakespear looks like a laborious attempt
-to bury the characteristic merits of his author under a load of cumbrous
-phraseology, and to weigh his excellences and defects in equal scales,
-stuffed full of ‘swelling figures and sonorous epithets.’ Nor could
-it well be otherwise; Dr. Johnson’s general powers of reasoning
-overlaid his critical susceptibility. All his ideas were cast in a given
-mould, in a set form: they were made out by rule and system, by
-climax, inference, and antithesis:—Shakespear’s were the reverse.
-Johnson’s understanding dealt only in round numbers: the fractions
-were lost upon him. He reduced everything to the common standard
-of conventional propriety; and the most exquisite refinement or
-sublimity produced an effect on his mind, only as they could be
-translated into the language of measured prose. To him an excess
-of beauty was a fault; for it appeared to him like an excrescence;
-and his imagination was dazzled by the blaze of light. His writings
-neither shone with the beams of native genius, nor reflected them.
-The shifting shapes of fancy, the rainbow hues of things, made no
-impression on him: he seized only on the permanent and tangible.
-He had no idea of natural objects but ‘such as he could measure
-with a two-foot rule, or tell upon ten fingers’: he judged of human
-nature in the same way, by mood and figure: he saw only the definite,
-the positive, and the practical, the average forms of things, not their
-striking differences—their classes, not their degrees. He was a man
-of strong common sense and practical wisdom, rather than of genius
-or feeling. He retained the regular, habitual impressions of actual
-objects, but he could not follow the rapid flights of fancy, or the
-strong movements of passion. That is, he was to the poet what the
-painter of still life is to the painter of history. Common sense
-sympathises with the impressions of things on ordinary minds in
-ordinary circumstances: genius catches the glancing combinations
-presented to the eye of fancy, under the influence of passion. It is
-the province of the didactic reasoner to take cognizance of those
-results of human nature which are constantly repeated and always
-the same, which follow one another in regular succession, which are
-acted upon by large classes of men, and embodied in received customs,
-laws, language, and institutions; and it was in arranging, comparing,
-and arguing on these kind of general results, that Johnson’s excellence
-lay. But he could not quit his hold of the common-place and
-mechanical, and apply the general rule to the particular exception, or
-shew how the nature of man was modified by the workings of passion,
-or the infinite fluctuations of thought and accident. Hence he could
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>judge neither of the heights nor depths of poetry. Nor is this all;
-for being conscious of great powers in himself, and those powers of
-an adverse tendency to those of his author, he would be for setting
-up a foreign jurisdiction over poetry, and making criticism a kind of
-Procrustes’ bed of genius, where he might cut down imagination to
-matter-of-fact, regulate the passions according to reason, and translate
-the whole into logical diagrams and rhetorical declamation. Thus
-he says of Shakespear’s characters, in contradiction to what Pope
-had observed, and to what every one else feels, that each character
-is a species, instead of being an individual. He in fact found the
-general species or <em>didactic</em> form in Shakespear’s characters, which was
-all he sought or cared for; he did not find the individual traits, or
-the <em>dramatic</em> distinctions which Shakespear has engrafted on this
-general nature, because he felt no interest in them. Shakespear’s
-bold and happy flights of imagination were equally thrown away upon
-our author. He was not only without any particular fineness of
-organic sensibility, alive to all the ‘mighty world of ear and eye,’
-which is necessary to the painter or musician, but without that intenseness
-of passion, which, seeking to exaggerate whatever excites
-the feelings of pleasure or power in the mind, and moulding the
-impressions of natural objects according to the impulses of imagination,
-produces a genius and a taste for poetry. According to Dr. Johnson,
-a mountain is sublime, or a rose is beautiful; for that their name and
-definition imply. But he would no more be able to give the description
-of Dover cliff in <cite>Lear</cite>, or the description of flowers in <cite>The
-Winter’s Tale</cite>, than to describe the objects of a sixth sense; nor do
-we think he would have any very profound feeling of the beauty of
-the passages here referred to. A stately common-place, such as
-Congreve’s description of a ruin in the <cite>Mourning Bride</cite>, would have
-answered Johnson’s purpose just as well, or better than the first; and
-an indiscriminate profusion of scents and hues would have interfered
-less with the ordinary routine of his imagination than Perdita’s lines,
-which seem enamoured of their own sweetness—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in10'>——‘Daffodils</div>
- <div class='line'>That come before the swallow dares, and take</div>
- <div class='line'>The winds of March with beauty; violets dim,</div>
- <div class='line'>But sweeter than the lids of Juno’s eyes,</div>
- <div class='line'>Or Cytherea’s breath.’—</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>No one who does not feel the passion which these objects inspire
-can go along with the imagination which seeks to express that passion
-and the uneasy sense of delight accompanying it by something still
-more beautiful, and no one can feel this passionate love of nature
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>without quick natural sensibility. To a mere literal and formal
-apprehension, the inimitably characteristic epithet, ‘violets <em>dim</em>,’ must
-seem to imply a defect, rather than a beauty; and to any one, not
-feeling the full force of that epithet, which suggests an image like
-‘the sleepy eye of love,’ the allusion to ‘the lids of Juno’s eyes’
-must appear extravagant and unmeaning. Shakespear’s fancy lent
-words and images to the most refined sensibility to nature, struggling
-for expression: his descriptions are identical with the things themselves,
-seen through the fine medium of passion: strip them of that
-connection, and try them by ordinary conceptions and ordinary rules,
-and they are as grotesque and barbarous as you please!—By thus
-lowering Shakespear’s genius to the standard of common-place invention,
-it was easy to show that his faults were as great as his
-beauties; for the excellence, which consists merely in a conformity
-to rules, is counterbalanced by the technical violation of them.
-Another circumstance which led to Dr. Johnson’s indiscriminate
-praise or censure of Shakespear, is the very structure of his style.
-Johnson wrote a kind of rhyming prose, in which he was as much
-compelled to finish the different clauses of his sentences, and to
-balance one period against another, as the writer of heroic verse is
-to keep to lines of ten syllables with similar terminations. He no
-sooner acknowledges the merits of his author in one line than the
-periodical revolution of his style carries the weight of his opinion
-completely over to the side of objection, thus keeping up a perpetual
-alternation of perfections and absurdities. We do not otherwise
-know how to account for such assertions as the following:—</p>
-
-<p class='c016'>‘In his tragic scenes, there is always something wanting, but his comedy
-often surpasses expectation or desire. His comedy pleases by the thoughts
-and the language, and his tragedy, for the greater part, by incident and
-action. His tragedy seems to be skill, his comedy to be instinct.’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Yet after saying that ‘his tragedy was skill,’ he affirms in the next
-page,</p>
-
-<p class='c016'>‘His declamations or set speeches are commonly cold and weak, <em>for his
-power was the power of nature</em>: when he endeavoured, like other tragic
-writers, to catch opportunities of amplification, and instead of inquiring
-what the occasion demanded, to shew how much his stores of knowledge
-could supply, he seldom escapes without the pity or resentment of his
-reader.’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Poor Shakespear! Between the charges here brought against him,
-of want of nature in the first instance, and of want of skill in the
-second, he could hardly escape being condemned. And again,</p>
-
-<p class='c016'>‘But the admirers of this great poet have most reason to complain when
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>he approaches nearest to his highest excellence, and seems fully resolved
-to sink them in dejection, or mollify them with tender emotions by the
-fall of greatness, the danger of innocence, or the crosses of love. What
-he does best, he soon ceases to do. He no sooner begins to move than he
-counteracts himself; and terror and pity, as they are rising in the mind,
-are checked and blasted by sudden frigidity.’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In all this, our critic seems more bent on maintaining the equilibrium
-of his style than the consistency or truth of his opinions.—If
-Dr. Johnson’s opinion was right, the following observations on
-Shakespear’s Plays must be greatly exaggerated, if not ridiculous.
-If he was wrong, what has been said may perhaps account for his
-being so, without detracting from his ability and judgment in other
-things.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is proper to add, that the account of the <cite>Midsummer’s Night’s
-Dream</cite> has appeared in another work.<a id='r64' /><a href='#f64' class='c012'><sup>[64]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'><em>April 15, 1817.</em></span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span></div>
-<div class='ph2'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c001'>
- <div>CHARACTERS OF SHAKESPEAR’S PLAYS</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>CYMBELINE</h3>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='sc'>Cymbeline</span> is one of the most delightful of Shakespear’s historical
-plays. It may be considered as a dramatic romance, in which the
-most striking parts of the story are thrown into the form of a dialogue,
-and the intermediate circumstances are explained by the different
-speakers, as occasion renders it necessary. The action is less concentrated
-in consequence; but the interest becomes more aerial and
-refined from the principle of perspective introduced into the subject
-by the imaginary changes of scene, as well as by the length of time
-it occupies. The reading of this play is like going a journey with
-some uncertain object at the end of it, and in which the suspense is
-kept up and heightened by the long intervals between each action.
-Though the events are scattered over such an extent of surface, and
-relate to such a variety of characters, yet the links which bind the
-different interests of the story together are never entirely broken.
-The most straggling and seemingly casual incidents are contrived in
-such a manner as to lead at last to the most complete developement of
-the catastrophe. The ease and conscious unconcern with which this
-is effected only makes the skill more wonderful. The business of
-the plot evidently thickens in the last act: the story moves forward
-with increasing rapidity at every step; its various ramifications are
-drawn from the most distant points to the same centre; the principal
-characters are brought together, and placed in very critical situations;
-and the fate of almost every person in the drama is made to depend
-on the solution of a single circumstance—the answer of Iachimo to
-the question of Imogen respecting the obtaining of the ring from
-Posthumus. Dr. Johnson is of opinion that Shakespear was generally
-inattentive to the winding-up of his plots. We think the contrary is
-true; and we might cite in proof of this remark not only the present
-play, but the conclusion of <cite>Lear</cite>, of <cite>Romeo and Juliet</cite>, of <cite>Macbeth</cite>, of
-<cite>Othello</cite>, even of <cite>Hamlet</cite>, and of other plays of less moment, in which
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_180'>180</span>the last act is crowded with decisive events brought about by natural
-and striking means.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The pathos in <span class='sc'>Cymbeline</span> is not violent or tragical, but of the most
-pleasing and amiable kind. A certain tender gloom overspreads the
-whole. Posthumus is the ostensible hero of the piece, but its greatest
-charm is the character of Imogen. Posthumus is only interesting
-from the interest she takes in him; and she is only interesting herself
-from her tenderness and constancy to her husband. It is the peculiar
-excellence of Shakespear’s heroines, that they seem to exist only in
-their attachment to others. They are pure abstractions of the affections.
-We think as little of their persons as they do themselves,
-because we are let into the secrets of their hearts, which are more
-important. We are too much interested in their affairs to stop to
-look at their faces, except by stealth and at intervals. No one ever
-hit the true perfection of the female character, the sense of weakness
-leaning on the strength of its affections for support, so well as
-Shakespear—no one ever so well painted natural tenderness free
-from affectation and disguise—no one else ever so well shewed how
-delicacy and timidity, when driven to extremity, grow romantic and
-extravagant; for the romance of his heroines (in which they abound)
-is only an excess of the habitual prejudices of their sex, scrupulous
-of being false to their vows, truant to their affections, and taught by
-the force of feeling when to forego the forms of propriety for the
-essence of it. His women were in this respect exquisite logicians;
-for there is nothing so logical as passion. They knew their own
-minds exactly; and only followed up a favourite purpose, which
-they had sworn to with their tongues, and which was engraven on
-their hearts, into its untoward consequences. They were the prettiest
-little set of martyrs and confessors on record.—Cibber, in speaking
-of the early English stage, accounts for the want of prominence and
-theatrical display in Shakespear’s female characters from the circumstance,
-that women in those days were not allowed to play the parts
-of women, which made it necessary to keep them a good deal in the
-back-ground. Does not this state of manners itself, which prevented
-their exhibiting themselves in public, and confined them to the relations
-and charities of domestic life, afford a truer explanation of the
-matter? His women are certainly very unlike stage-heroines; the
-reverse of tragedy-queens.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>We have almost as great an affection for Imogen as she had for
-Posthumus; and she deserves it better. Of all Shakespear’s women
-she is perhaps the most tender and the most artless. Her incredulity
-in the opening scene with Iachimo, as to her husband’s infidelity,
-is much the same as Desdemona’s backwardness to believe Othello’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>jealousy. Her answer to the most distressing part of the picture is
-only, ‘My lord, I fear, has forgot Britain.’ Her readiness to pardon
-Iachimo’s false imputations and his designs against herself, is a good
-lesson to prudes; and may shew that where there is a real attachment
-to virtue, it has no need to bolster itself up with an outrageous or
-affected antipathy to vice. The scene in which Pisanio gives Imogen
-his master’s letter, accusing her of incontinency on the treacherous
-suggestions of Iachimo, is as touching as it is possible for anything
-to be:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Pisanio.</em> What cheer, Madam?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Imogen.</em> False to his bed! What is it to be false?</div>
- <div class='line'>To lie in watch there, and to think on him?</div>
- <div class='line'>To weep ‘twixt clock and clock? If sleep charge nature,</div>
- <div class='line'>To break it with a fearful dream of him,</div>
- <div class='line'>And cry myself awake? That’s false to ‘s bed, is it?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Pisanio.</em> Alas, good lady!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Imogen.</em> I false? thy conscience witness, Iachimo,</div>
- <div class='line'>Thou didst accuse him of incontinency,</div>
- <div class='line'>Thou then look’dst like a villain: now methinks,</div>
- <div class='line'>Thy favour’s good enough. Some Jay of Italy,</div>
- <div class='line'>Whose mother was her painting, hath betray’d him:</div>
- <div class='line'>Poor I am stale, a garment out of fashion,</div>
- <div class='line'>And for I am richer than to hang by th’ walls,</div>
- <div class='line'>I must be ript; to pieces with me. Oh,</div>
- <div class='line'>Men’s vows are women’s traitors. All good seeming</div>
- <div class='line'>By thy revolt, oh husband, shall be thought</div>
- <div class='line'>Put on for villainy: not born where ‘t grows,</div>
- <div class='line'>But worn a bait for ladies.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Pisanio.</em> Good Madam, hear me—</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Imogen.</em> Talk thy tongue weary, speak:</div>
- <div class='line'>I have heard I am a strumpet, and mine ear,</div>
- <div class='line'>Therein false struck, can take no greater wound,</div>
- <div class='line'>Nor tent to bottom that.’——</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>When Pisanio, who had been charged to kill his mistress, puts her
-in a way to live, she says,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in2'>‘Why, good fellow,</div>
- <div class='line'>What shall I do the while? Where bide? How live?</div>
- <div class='line'>Or in my life what comfort, when I am</div>
- <div class='line'>Dead to my husband?’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Yet when he advises her to disguise herself in boy’s clothes, and
-suggests ‘a course pretty and full in view,’ by which she may ‘happily
-be near the residence of Posthumus,’ she exclaims—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in2'>‘Oh, for such means,</div>
- <div class='line'>Though peril to my modesty, not death on ‘t,</div>
- <div class='line'>I would adventure.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>And when Pisanio, enlarging on the consequences, tells her she
-must change</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in10'>——‘Fear and niceness,</div>
- <div class='line'>The handmaids of all women, or more truly,</div>
- <div class='line'>Woman its pretty self, into a waggish courage,</div>
- <div class='line'>Ready in gibes, quick-answer’d, saucy, and</div>
- <div class='line'>As quarrellous as the weazel’——</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>she interrupts him hastily—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in2'>‘Nay, be brief;</div>
- <div class='line'>I see into thy end, and am almost</div>
- <div class='line'>A man already.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>In her journey thus disguised to Milford-Haven, she loses her guide
-and her way; and unbosoming her complaints, says beautifully—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in12'>——‘My dear lord,</div>
- <div class='line'>Thou art one of the false ones; now I think on thee,</div>
- <div class='line'>My hunger’s gone; but even before, I was</div>
- <div class='line'>At point to sink for food.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>She afterwards finds, as she thinks, the dead body of Posthumus,
-and engages herself as a footboy to serve a Roman officer, when she
-has done all due obsequies to him whom she calls her former
-master—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in12'>——‘And when</div>
- <div class='line'>With wild wood-leaves and weeds I ha’ strew’d his grave,</div>
- <div class='line'>And on it said a century of pray’rs,</div>
- <div class='line'>Such as I can, twice o’er, I ‘ll weep and sigh,</div>
- <div class='line'>And leaving so his service, follow you,</div>
- <div class='line'>So please you entertain me.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Now this is the very religion of love. She all along relies little
-on her personal charms, which she fears may have been eclipsed by
-some painted Jay of Italy; she relies on her merit, and her merit
-is in the depth of her love, her truth and constancy. Our admiration
-of her beauty is excited with as little consciousness as possible on her
-part. There are two delicious descriptions given of her, one when
-she is asleep, and one when she is supposed dead. Arviragus thus
-addresses her—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in10'>——‘With fairest flowers,</div>
- <div class='line'>While summer lasts, and I live here, Fidele,</div>
- <div class='line'>I’ll sweeten thy sad grave; thou shalt not lack</div>
- <div class='line'>The flow’r that’s like thy face, pale primrose, nor</div>
- <div class='line'>The azur’d hare-bell, like thy veins, no, nor</div>
- <div class='line'>The leaf of eglantine, which not to slander,</div>
- <div class='line'>Out-sweeten’d not thy breath.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span>The yellow Iachimo gives another thus, when he steals into her
-bedchamber:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in14'>——‘Cytherea,</div>
- <div class='line'>How bravely thou becom’st thy bed! Fresh lily,</div>
- <div class='line'>And whiter than the sheets! That I might touch—</div>
- <div class='line'>But kiss, one kiss—’Tis her breathing that</div>
- <div class='line'>Perfumes the chamber thus: the flame o’ th’ taper</div>
- <div class='line'>Bows toward her, and would under-peep her lids</div>
- <div class='line'>To see th’ enclosed lights now canopied</div>
- <div class='line'>Under the windows, white and azure, laced</div>
- <div class='line'>With blue of Heav’n’s own tinct—on her left breast</div>
- <div class='line'>A mole cinque-spotted, like the crimson drops</div>
- <div class='line'>I’ th’ bottom of a cowslip.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>There is a moral sense in the proud beauty of this last image, a
-rich surfeit of the fancy,—as that well-known passage beginning, ‘Me
-of my lawful pleasure she restrained, and prayed me oft forbearance,’
-sets a keener edge upon it by the inimitable picture of modesty and
-self-denial.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The character of Cloten, the conceited, booby lord, and rejected
-lover of Imogen, though not very agreeable in itself, and at present
-obsolete, is drawn with much humour and quaint extravagance. The
-description which Imogen gives of his unwelcome addresses to her—‘Whose
-love-suit hath been to me as fearful as a siege’—is enough
-to cure the most ridiculous lover of his folly. It is remarkable that
-though Cloten makes so poor a figure in love, he is described as
-assuming an air of consequence as the Queen’s son in a council of
-state, and with all the absurdity of his person and manners, is not
-without shrewdness in his observations. So true is it that folly is as
-often owing to a want of proper sentiments as to a want of understanding!
-The exclamation of the ancient critic—Oh Menander
-and Nature, which of you copied from the other! would not be
-misapplied to Shakespear.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The other characters in this play are represented with great truth
-and accuracy, and as it happens in most of the author’s works, there
-is not only the utmost keeping in each separate character; but in the
-casting of the different parts, and their relation to one another, there
-is an affinity and harmony, like what we may observe in the gradations
-of colour in a picture. The striking and powerful contrasts in which
-Shakespear abounds could not escape observation; but the use he
-makes of the principle of analogy to reconcile the greatest diversities
-of character and to maintain a continuity of feeling throughout, has
-not been sufficiently attended to. In <span class='sc'>Cymbeline</span>, for instance, the
-principal interest arises out of the unalterable fidelity of Imogen to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_184'>184</span>her husband under the most trying circumstances. Now the other
-parts of the picture are filled up with subordinate examples of the
-same feeling, variously modified by different situations, and applied
-to the purposes of virtue or vice. The plot is aided by the amorous
-importunities of Cloten, by the persevering determination of Iachimo
-to conceal the defeat of his project by a daring imposture: the
-faithful attachment of Pisanio to his mistress is an affecting accompaniment
-to the whole; the obstinate adherence to his purpose in
-Bellarius, who keeps the fate of the young princes so long a secret
-in resentment for the ungrateful return to his former services, the
-incorrigible wickedness of the Queen, and even the blind uxorious
-confidence of Cymbeline, are all so many lines of the same story,
-tending to the same point. The effect of this coincidence is rather
-felt than observed; and as the impression exists unconsciously in the
-mind of the reader, so it probably arose in the same manner in the
-mind of the author, not from design, but from the force of natural
-association, a particular train of thought suggesting different inflections
-of the same predominant feeling, melting into, and strengthening one
-another, like chords in music.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The characters of Bellarius, Guiderius, and Arviragus, and the
-romantic scenes in which they appear, are a fine relief to the intrigues
-and artificial refinements of the court from which they are banished.
-Nothing can surpass the wildness and simplicity of the descriptions
-of the mountain life they lead. They follow the business of huntsmen,
-not of shepherds; and this is in keeping with the spirit of adventure
-and uncertainty in the rest of the story, and with the scenes in which
-they are afterwards called on to act. How admirably the youthful
-fire and impatience to emerge from their obscurity in the young
-princes is opposed to the cooler calculations and prudent resignation
-of their more experienced counsellor! How well the disadvantages
-of knowledge and of ignorance, of solitude and society, are placed
-against each other!</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Guiderius.</em> Out of your proof you speak: we poor unfledg’d</div>
- <div class='line'>Have never wing’d from view o’ th’ nest; nor know not</div>
- <div class='line'>What air’s from home. Haply this life is best,</div>
- <div class='line'>If quiet life is best; sweeter to you</div>
- <div class='line'>That have a sharper known; well corresponding</div>
- <div class='line'>With your stiff age: but unto us it is</div>
- <div class='line'>A cell of ignorance; travelling a-bed,</div>
- <div class='line'>A prison for a debtor, that not dares</div>
- <div class='line'>To stride a limit.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Arviragus.</em> What should we speak of</div>
- <div class='line'>When we are old as you? When we shall hear</div>
- <div class='line'>The rain and wind beat dark December! How,</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>In this our pinching cave, shall we discourse</div>
- <div class='line'>The freezing hours away? We have seen nothing.</div>
- <div class='line'>We are beastly; subtle as the fox for prey,</div>
- <div class='line'>Like warlike as the wolf for what we eat:</div>
- <div class='line'>Our valour is to chase what flies; our cage</div>
- <div class='line'>We make a quire, as doth the prison’d bird,</div>
- <div class='line'>And sing our bondage freely.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The answer of Bellarius to this expostulation is hardly satisfactory;
-for nothing can be an answer to hope, or the passion of the mind for
-unknown good, but experience.—The forest of Arden in <cite>As You Like It</cite>
-can alone compare with the mountain scenes in <span class='sc'>Cymbeline</span>: yet how
-different the contemplative quiet of the one from the enterprising
-boldness and precarious mode of subsistence in the other! Shakespear
-not only lets us into the minds of his characters, but gives a tone and
-colour to the scenes he describes from the feelings of their supposed
-inhabitants. He at the same time preserves the utmost propriety of
-action and passion, and gives all their local accompaniments. If he
-was equal to the greatest things, he was not above an attention to
-the smallest. Thus the gallant sportsmen in <span class='sc'>Cymbeline</span> have to
-encounter the abrupt declivities of hill and valley: Touchstone and
-Audrey jog along a level path. The deer in <span class='sc'>Cymbeline</span> are only
-regarded as objects of prey, ‘The game’s a-foot,’ etc.—with Jaques
-they are fine subjects to moralise upon at leisure, ‘under the shade of
-melancholy boughs.’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>We cannot take leave of this play, which is a favourite with us,
-without noticing some occasional touches of natural piety and morality.
-We may allude here to the opening of the scene in which Bellarius
-instructs the young princes to pay their orisons to heaven:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in10'>——‘See, boys! this gate</div>
- <div class='line'>Instructs you how t’ adore the Heav’ns; and bows you</div>
- <div class='line'>To morning’s holy office.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Guiderius.</em> Hail, Heav’n!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Arviragus.</em> Hail, Heav’n!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Bellarius.</em> Now for our mountain-sport, up to yon hill.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>What a grace and unaffected spirit of piety breathes in this passage!
-In like manner, one of the brothers says to the other, when about
-to perform the funeral rites to Fidele,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Nay, Cadwall, we must lay his head to the east;</div>
- <div class='line'>My Father hath a reason for ‘t’—</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>—as if some allusion to the doctrines of the Christian faith had been
-casually dropped in conversation by the old man, and had been no
-farther inquired into.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>Shakespear’s morality is introduced in the same simple, unobtrusive
-manner. Imogen will not let her companions stay away from the
-chase to attend her when sick, and gives her reason for it—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Stick to your journal course; <em>the breach of custom</em></div>
- <div class='line'><em>Is breach of all</em>!’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>When the Queen attempts to disguise her motives for procuring
-the poison from Cornelius, by saying she means to try its effects on
-‘creatures not worth the hanging,’ his answer conveys at once a tacit
-reproof of her hypocrisy, and a useful lesson of humanity—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in12'>——‘Your Highness</div>
- <div class='line'>Shall from this practice but make hard your heart.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>MACBETH</h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘The poet’s eye in a fine frenzy rolling</div>
- <div class='line'>Doth glance from heaven to earth, from earth to heaven;</div>
- <div class='line'>And as imagination bodies forth</div>
- <div class='line'>The forms of things unknown, the poet’s pen</div>
- <div class='line'>Turns them to shape, and gives to airy nothing</div>
- <div class='line'>A local habitation and a name.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='sc'>Macbeth</span> and <cite>Lear</cite>, <cite>Othello</cite> and <cite>Hamlet</cite>, are usually reckoned Shakespear’s
-four principal tragedies. <cite>Lear</cite> stands first for the profound
-intensity of the passion; <span class='sc'>Macbeth</span> for the wildness of the imagination
-and the rapidity of the action; <cite>Othello</cite> for the progressive interest and
-powerful alternations of feeling; <cite>Hamlet</cite> for the refined developement
-of thought and sentiment. If the force of genius shewn in each of
-these works is astonishing, their variety is not less so. They are
-like different creations of the same mind, not one of which has the
-slightest reference to the rest. This distinctness and originality is
-indeed the necessary consequence of truth and nature. Shakespear’s
-genius alone appeared to possess the resources of nature. He is
-‘your only <em>tragedy-maker</em>.’ His plays have the force of things upon
-the mind. What he represents is brought home to the bosom as a
-part of our experience, implanted in the memory as if we had known
-the places, persons, and things of which he treats. <span class='sc'>Macbeth</span> is like
-a record of a preternatural and tragical event. It has the rugged
-severity of an old chronicle with all that the imagination of the poet
-can engraft upon traditional belief. The castle of Macbeth, round
-which ‘the air smells wooingly,’ and where ‘the temple-haunting
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>martlet builds,’ has a real subsistence in the mind; the Weïrd Sisters
-meet us in person on ‘the blasted heath’; the ‘air-drawn dagger’
-moves slowly before our eyes; the ‘gracious Duncan,’ the ‘blood-boultered
-Banquo’ stand before us; all that passed through the mind
-of Macbeth passes, without the loss of a tittle, through ours. All
-that could actually take place, and all that is only possible to be
-conceived, what was said and what was done, the workings of passion,
-the spells of magic, are brought before us with the same absolute
-truth and vividness—Shakespear excelled in the openings of his
-plays: that of <span class='sc'>Macbeth</span> is the most striking of any. The wildness
-of the scenery, the sudden shifting of the situations and characters,
-the bustle, the expectations excited, are equally extraordinary. From
-the first entrance of the Witches and the description of them when
-they meet Macbeth,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in12'>——‘What are these</div>
- <div class='line'>So wither’d and so wild in their attire,</div>
- <div class='line'>That look not like the inhabitants of th’ earth</div>
- <div class='line'>And yet are on’t?’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>the mind is prepared for all that follows.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This tragedy is alike distinguished for the lofty imagination it
-displays, and for the tumultuous vehemence of the action; and the
-one is made the moving principle of the other. The overwhelming
-pressure of preternatural agency urges on the tide of human passion
-with redoubled force. Macbeth himself appears driven along by the
-violence of his fate like a vessel drifting before a storm: he reels to
-and fro like a drunken man; he staggers under the weight of his own
-purposes and the suggestions of others; he stands at bay with his
-situation; and from the superstitious awe and breathless suspense
-into which the communications of the Weïrd Sisters throw him, is
-hurried on with daring impatience to verify their predictions, and
-with impious and bloody hand to tear aside the veil which hides the
-uncertainty of the future. He is not equal to the struggle with fate
-and conscience. He now ‘bends up each corporal instrument to the
-terrible feat’; at other times his heart misgives him, and he is cowed
-and abashed by his success. ‘The deed, no less than the attempt,
-confounds him.’ His mind is assailed by the stings of remorse, and
-full of ‘preternatural solicitings.’ His speeches and soliloquies are
-dark riddles on human life, baffling solution, and entangling him in
-their labyrinths. In thought he is absent and perplexed, sudden and
-desperate in act, from a distrust of his own resolution. His energy
-springs from the anxiety and agitation of his mind. His blindly
-rushing forward on the objects of his ambition and revenge, or his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>recoiling from them, equally betrays the harassed state of his feelings.—This
-part of his character is admirably set off by being brought in
-connection with that of Lady Macbeth, whose obdurate strength of
-will and masculine firmness give her the ascendancy over her husband’s
-faltering virtue. She at once seizes on the opportunity that offers
-for the accomplishment of all their wished-for greatness, and never
-flinches from her object till all is over. The magnitude of her
-resolution almost covers the magnitude of her guilt. She is a great
-bad woman, whom we hate, but whom we fear more than we hate.
-She does not excite our loathing and abhorrence like Regan and
-Gonerill. She is only wicked to gain a great end; and is perhaps
-more distinguished by her commanding presence of mind and inexorable
-self-will, which do not suffer her to be diverted from a bad
-purpose, when once formed, by weak and womanly regrets, than by
-the hardness of her heart or want of natural affections. The impression
-which her lofty determination of character makes on the
-mind of Macbeth is well described where he exclaims,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in10'>——‘Bring forth men children only;</div>
- <div class='line'>For thy undaunted mettle should compose</div>
- <div class='line'>Nothing but males!’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Nor do the pains she is at to ‘screw his courage to the sticking-place,’
-the reproach to him, not to be ‘lost so poorly in himself,’
-the assurance that ‘a little water clears them of this deed,’ show
-anything but her greater consistency in depravity. Her strong-nerved
-ambition furnishes ribs of steel to ‘the sides of his intent’;
-and she is herself wound up to the execution of her baneful project
-with the same unshrinking fortitude in crime, that in other circumstances
-she would probably have shown patience in suffering. The
-deliberate sacrifice of all other considerations to the gaining ‘for
-their future days and nights sole sovereign sway and masterdom,’ by
-the murder of Duncan, is gorgeously expressed in her invocation on
-hearing of ‘his fatal entrance under her battlements’:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in8'>——‘Come all you spirits</div>
- <div class='line'>That tend on mortal thoughts, unsex me here:</div>
- <div class='line'>And fill me, from the crown to th’ toe, top-full</div>
- <div class='line'>Of direst cruelty; make thick my blood,</div>
- <div class='line'>Stop up the access and passage to remorse,</div>
- <div class='line'>That no compunctious visitings of nature</div>
- <div class='line'>Shake my fell purpose, nor keep peace between</div>
- <div class='line'>The effect and it. Come to my woman’s breasts,</div>
- <div class='line'>And take my milk for gall, you murthering ministers,</div>
- <div class='line'>Wherever in your sightless substances</div>
- <div class='line'>You wait on nature’s mischief. Come, thick night!</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>And pall thee in the dunnest smoke of hell,</div>
- <div class='line'>That my keen knife see not the wound it makes,</div>
- <div class='line'>Nor heav’n peep through the blanket of the dark,</div>
- <div class='line'>To cry, hold, hold!’——</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>When she first hears that ‘Duncan comes there to sleep’ she is so
-overcome by the news, which is beyond her utmost expectations, that
-she answers the messenger, ‘Thou’rt mad to say it’: and on receiving
-her husband’s account of the predictions of the Witches, conscious
-of his instability of purpose, and that her presence is necessary to
-goad him on to the consummation of his promised greatness, she
-exclaims—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in10'>——‘Hie thee hither,</div>
- <div class='line'>That I may pour my spirits in thine ear,</div>
- <div class='line'>And chastise with the valour of my tongue</div>
- <div class='line'>All that impedes thee from the golden round,</div>
- <div class='line'>Which fate and metaphysical aid doth seem</div>
- <div class='line'>To have thee crowned withal.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>This swelling exultation and keen spirit of triumph, this uncontroulable
-eagerness of anticipation, which seems to dilate her form and
-take possession of all her faculties, this solid, substantial flesh and
-blood display of passion, exhibit a striking contrast to the cold,
-abstracted, gratuitous, servile malignity of the Witches, who are
-equally instrumental in urging Macbeth to his fate for the mere love
-of mischief, and from a disinterested delight in deformity and cruelty.
-They are hags of mischief, obscene panders to iniquity, malicious
-from their impotence of enjoyment, enamoured of destruction, because
-they are themselves unreal, abortive, half-existences—who become
-sublime from their exemption from all human sympathies and contempt
-for all human affairs, as Lady Macbeth does by the force of
-passion! Her fault seems to have been an excess of that strong
-principle of self-interest and family aggrandisement, not amenable to
-the common feelings of compassion and justice, which is so marked
-a feature in barbarous nations and times. A passing reflection of
-this kind, on the resemblance of the sleeping king to her father, alone
-prevents her from slaying Duncan with her own hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In speaking of the character of Lady Macbeth, we ought not to
-pass over Mrs. Siddons’s manner of acting that part. We can conceive
-of nothing grander. It was something above nature. It seemed
-almost as if a being of a superior order had dropped from a higher
-sphere to awe the world with the majesty of her appearance. Power
-was seated on her brow, passion emanated from her breast as from a
-shrine; she was tragedy personified. In coming on in the sleeping-scene,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>her eyes were open, but their sense was shut. She was like
-a person bewildered and unconscious of what she did. Her lips
-moved involuntarily—all her gestures were involuntary and mechanical.
-She glided on and off the stage like an apparition. To have seen
-her in that character was an event in every one’s life, not to be
-forgotten.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The dramatic beauty of the character of Duncan, which excites
-the respect and pity even of his murderers, has been often pointed
-out. It forms a picture of itself. An instance of the author’s power
-of giving a striking effect to a common reflection, by the manner of
-introducing it, occurs in a speech of Duncan, complaining of his
-having been deceived in his opinion of the Thane of Cawdor, at the
-very moment that he is expressing the most unbounded confidence in
-the loyalty and services of Macbeth.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in2'>‘There is no art</div>
- <div class='line'>To find the mind’s construction in the face:</div>
- <div class='line'>He was a gentleman, on whom I built</div>
- <div class='line'>An absolute trust.</div>
- <div class='line'>O worthiest cousin, (<em>addressing himself to Macbeth</em>.)</div>
- <div class='line'>The sin of my ingratitude e’en now</div>
- <div class='line'>Was great upon me,’ etc.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Another passage to show that Shakespear lost sight of nothing
-that could in any way give relief or heightening to his subject, is the
-conversation which takes place between Banquo and Fleance immediately
-before the murder-scene of Duncan.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Banquo.</em> How goes the night, boy?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Fleance.</em> The moon is down: I have not heard the clock.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Banquo.</em> And she goes down at twelve.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Fleance.</em> I take’t, ’tis later, Sir.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Banquo.</em> Hold, take my sword. There’s husbandry in heav’n,</div>
- <div class='line'>Their candles are all out.—</div>
- <div class='line'>A heavy summons lies like lead upon me,</div>
- <div class='line'>And yet I would not sleep: Merciful Powers,</div>
- <div class='line'>Restrain in me the cursed thoughts that nature</div>
- <div class='line'>Gives way to in repose.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>In like manner, a fine idea is given of the gloomy coming on of
-evening, just as Banquo is going to be assassinated.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in2'>‘Light thickens and the crow</div>
- <div class='line'>Makes wing to the rooky wood.’</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Now spurs the lated traveller apace</div>
- <div class='line'>To gain the timely inn.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span><span class='sc'>Macbeth</span> (generally speaking) is done upon a stronger and more
-systematic principle of contrast than any other of Shakespear’s plays.
-It moves upon the verge of an abyss, and is a constant struggle
-between life and death. The action is desperate and the reaction is
-dreadful. It is a huddling together of fierce extremes, a war of
-opposite natures which of them shall destroy the other. There is
-nothing but what has a violent end or violent beginnings. The lights
-and shades are laid on with a determined hand; the transitions from
-triumph to despair, from the height of terror to the repose of death,
-are sudden and startling; every passion brings in its fellow-contrary,
-and the thoughts pitch and jostle against each other as in the dark.
-The whole play is an unruly chaos of strange and forbidden things,
-where the ground rocks under our feet. Shakespear’s genius here
-took its full swing, and trod upon the farthest bounds of nature and
-passion. This circumstance will account for the abruptness and
-violent antitheses of the style, the throes and labour which run through
-the expression, and from defects will turn them into beauties. ‘So
-fair and foul a day I have not seen,’ etc. ‘Such welcome and
-unwelcome news together.’ ‘Men’s lives are like the flowers in
-their caps, dying or ere they sicken.’ ‘Look like the innocent
-flower, but be the serpent under it.’ The scene before the castle-gate
-follows the appearance of the Witches on the heath, and is
-followed by a midnight murder. Duncan is cut off betimes by treason
-leagued with witchcraft, and Macduff is ripped untimely from his
-mother’s womb to avenge his death. Macbeth, after the death of
-Banquo, wishes for his presence in extravagant terms, ‘To him and
-all we thirst,’ and when his ghost appears, cries out, ‘Avaunt and
-quit my sight,’ and being gone, he is ‘himself again.’ Macbeth
-resolves to get rid of Macduff, that ‘he may sleep in spite of thunder’;
-and cheers his wife on the doubtful intelligence of Banquo’s taking-off
-with the encouragement—‘Then be thou jocund: ere the bat has
-flown his cloistered flight; ere to black Hecate’s summons the
-shard-born beetle has rung night’s yawning peal, there shall be done—a
-deed of dreadful note.’ In Lady Macbeth’s speech ‘Had he
-not resembled my father as he slept, I had done’t,’ there is murder
-and filial piety together; and in urging him to fulfil his vengeance
-against the defenceless king, her thoughts spare the blood neither of
-infants nor old age. The description of the Witches is full of the
-same contradictory principle; they ‘rejoice when good kings bleed,’
-they are neither of the earth nor the air, but both; ‘they should be
-women, but their beards forbid it’; they take all the pains possible
-to lead Macbeth on to the height of his ambition, only to betray him
-‘in deeper consequence,’ and after showing him all the pomp of their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span>art, discover their malignant delight in his disappointed hopes, by
-that bitter taunt, ‘Why stands Macbeth thus amazedly?’ We might
-multiply such instances every where.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The leading features in the character of Macbeth are striking
-enough, and they form what may be thought at first only a bold,
-rude, Gothic outline. By comparing it with other characters of the
-same author we shall perceive the absolute truth and identity which
-is observed in the midst of the giddy whirl and rapid career of events.
-Macbeth in Shakespear no more loses his identity of character in the
-fluctuations of fortune or the storm of passion, than Macbeth in himself
-would have lost the identity of his person. Thus he is as distinct
-a being from Richard <span class='fss'>III.</span> as it is possible to imagine, though these
-two characters in common hands, and indeed in the hands of any
-other poet, would have been a repetition of the same general idea,
-more or less exaggerated. For both are tyrants, usurpers, murderers,
-both aspiring and ambitious, both courageous, cruel, treacherous.
-But Richard is cruel from nature and constitution. Macbeth becomes
-so from accidental circumstances. Richard is from his birth deformed
-in body and mind, and naturally incapable of good. Macbeth is
-full of ‘the milk of human kindness,’ is frank, sociable, generous.
-He is tempted to the commission of guilt by golden opportunities, by
-the instigations of his wife, and by prophetic warnings. Fate and
-metaphysical aid conspire against his virtue and his loyalty. Richard
-on the contrary needs no prompter, but wades through a series of
-crimes to the height of his ambition from the ungovernable violence
-of his temper and a reckless love of mischief. He is never gay but
-in the prospect or in the success of his villainies: Macbeth is full of
-horror at the thoughts of the murder of Duncan, which he is with
-difficulty prevailed on to commit, and of remorse after its perpetration.
-Richard has no mixture of common humanity in his composition, no
-regard to kindred or posterity, he owns no fellowship with others, he
-is ‘himself alone.’ Macbeth is not destitute of feelings of sympathy,
-is accessible to pity, is even made in some measure the dupe of
-his uxoriousness, ranks the loss of friends, of the cordial love of
-his followers, and of his good name, among the causes which
-have made him weary of life, and regrets that he has ever seized
-the crown by unjust means, since he cannot transmit it to his
-posterity—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘For Banquo’s issue have I fil’d my mind—</div>
- <div class='line'>For them the gracious Duncan have I murther’d,</div>
- <div class='line'>To make them kings, the seed of Banquo kings.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the agitation of his mind, he envies those whom he has sent to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>peace. ‘Duncan is in his grave; after life’s fitful fever he sleeps
-well.’—It is true, he becomes more callous as he plunges deeper in
-guilt, ‘direness is thus rendered familiar to his slaughterous thoughts,’
-and he in the end anticipates his wife in the boldness and bloodiness
-of his enterprises, while she for want of the same stimulus of action,
-‘is troubled with thick-coming fancies that rob her of her rest,’ goes
-mad and dies. Macbeth endeavours to escape from reflection on his
-crimes by repelling their consequences, and banishes remorse for the
-past by the meditation of future mischief. This is not the principle
-of Richard’s cruelty, which displays the wanton malice of a fiend as
-much as the frailty of human passion. Macbeth is goaded on to acts
-of violence and retaliation by necessity; to Richard, blood is a
-pastime.—There are other decisive differences inherent in the two
-characters. Richard may be regarded as a man of the world, a
-plotting, hardened knave, wholly regardless of every thing but his own
-ends, and the means to secure them.—Not so Macbeth. The superstitions
-of the age, the rude state of society, the local scenery and
-customs, all give a wildness and imaginary grandeur to his character.
-From the strangeness of the events that surround him, he is full of
-amazement and fear; and stands in doubt between the world of
-reality and the world of fancy. He sees sights not shown to mortal
-eye, and hears unearthly music. All is tumult and disorder within
-and without his mind; his purposes recoil upon himself, are broken
-and disjointed; he is the double thrall of his passions and his evil
-destiny. Richard is not a character either of imagination or pathos,
-but of pure self-will. There is no conflict of opposite feelings in his
-breast. The apparitions which he sees only haunt him in his sleep;
-nor does he live like Macbeth in a waking dream. Macbeth has
-considerable energy and manliness of character; but then he is
-‘subject to all the skyey influences.’ He is sure of nothing but the
-present moment. Richard in the busy turbulence of his projects
-never loses his self-possession, and makes use of every circumstance
-that happens as an instrument of his long-reaching designs. In his
-last extremity we can only regard him as a wild beast taken in the
-toils: while we never entirely lose our concern for Macbeth; and
-he calls back all our sympathy by that fine close of thoughtful
-melancholy—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘My way of life is fallen into the sear,</div>
- <div class='line'>The yellow leaf; and that which should accompany old age,</div>
- <div class='line'>As honour, troops of friends, I must not look to have;</div>
- <div class='line'>But in their stead, curses not loud but deep,</div>
- <div class='line'>Mouth-honour, breath, which the poor heart</div>
- <div class='line'>Would fain deny, and dare not.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>We can conceive a common actor to play Richard tolerably well;
-we can conceive no one to play Macbeth properly, or to look like
-a man that had encountered the Weïrd Sisters. All the actors that
-we have ever seen, appear as if they had encountered them on the
-boards of Covent-garden or Drury-lane, but not on the heath at Fores,
-and as if they did not believe what they had seen. The Witches of
-<span class='sc'>Macbeth</span> indeed are ridiculous on the modern stage, and we doubt if
-the Furies of Æschylus would be more respected. The progress of
-manners and knowledge has an influence on the stage, and will in
-time perhaps destroy both tragedy and comedy. Filch’s picking
-pockets in the <cite>Beggar’s Opera</cite> is not so good a jest as it used to be:
-by the force of the police and of philosophy, Lillo’s murders and
-the ghosts in Shakespear will become obsolete. At last, there will
-be nothing left, good nor bad, to be desired or dreaded, on the theatre
-or in real life.—A question has been started with respect to the
-originality of Shakespear’s Witches, which has been well answered
-by Mr. Lamb in his notes to the ‘Specimens of Early Dramatic
-Poetry.’</p>
-
-<p class='c016'>‘Though some resemblance may be traced between the charms in
-<span class='sc'>Macbeth</span>, and the incantations in this play (the Witch of Middleton),
-which is supposed to have preceded it, this coincidence will not detract
-much from the originality of Shakespear. His Witches are distinguished
-from the Witches of Middleton by essential differences. These are
-creatures to whom man or woman plotting some dire mischief might resort
-for occasional consultation. Those originate deeds of blood, and begin
-bad impulses to men. From the moment that their eyes first meet with
-Macbeth’s, he is spell-bound. That meeting sways his destiny. He can
-never break the fascination. These Witches can hurt the body; those
-have power over the soul.—Hecate in Middleton has a son, a low buffoon:
-the hags of Shakespear have neither child of their own, nor seem to be
-descended from any parent. They are foul anomalies, of whom we know
-not whence they are sprung, nor whether they have beginning or ending.
-As they are without human passions, so they seem to be without human
-relations. They come with thunder and lightning, and vanish to airy
-music. This is all we know of them.—Except Hecate, they have no
-names, which heightens their mysteriousness. The names, and some of
-the properties which Middleton has given to his hags, excite smiles. The
-Weïrd Sisters are serious things. Their presence cannot co-exist with
-mirth. But, in a lesser degree, the Witches of Middleton are fine creations.
-Their power too is, in some measure, over the mind. They raise jars,
-jealousies, strifes, <em>like a thick scurf o’er life</em>.’</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span>
- <h3 class='c010'>JULIUS CÆSAR</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='sc'>Julius Cæsar</span> was one of three principal plays by different authors,
-pitched upon by the celebrated Earl of Hallifax to be brought out in
-a splendid manner by subscription, in the year 1707. The other two
-were the <cite>King and No King</cite> of Fletcher, and Dryden’s <cite>Maiden Queen</cite>.
-There perhaps might be political reasons for this selection, as far as
-regards our author. Otherwise, Shakespear’s <span class='sc'>Julius Cæsar</span> is not
-equal as a whole, to either of his other plays taken from the Roman
-history. It is inferior in interest to <cite>Coriolanus</cite>, and both in interest
-and power to <cite>Antony and Cleopatra</cite>. It however abounds in admirable
-and affecting passages, and is remarkable for the profound knowledge
-of character, in which Shakespear could scarcely fail. If there is any
-exception to this remark, it is in the hero of the piece himself. We
-do not much admire the representation here given of Julius Cæsar,
-nor do we think it answers to the portrait given of him in his
-Commentaries. He makes several vapouring and rather pedantic
-speeches, and does nothing. Indeed, he has nothing to do. So far,
-the fault of the character is the fault of the plot.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The spirit with which the poet has entered at once into the
-manners of the common people, and the jealousies and heart-burnings
-of the different factions, is shown in the first scene, where Flavius
-and Marullus, tribunes of the people, and some citizens of Rome,
-appear upon the stage.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c018'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Flavius.</em> Thou art a cobler, art thou?</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'><em>Cobler.</em> Truly, Sir, <em>all</em> that I live by, is the <em>awl</em>. I meddle with no
-tradesman’s matters, nor woman’s matters, but <em>with-al</em>, I am indeed, Sir, a
-surgeon to old shoes; when they are in great danger, I recover them.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c018'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Flavius.</em> But wherefore art not in thy shop to-day?</div>
- <div class='line'>Why dost thou lead these men about the streets?</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'><em>Cobler.</em> Truly, Sir, to wear out their shoes, to get myself into more work.
-But indeed, Sir, we make holiday to see Cæsar, and rejoice in his triumph.’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To this specimen of quaint low humour immediately follows that
-unexpected and animated burst of indignant eloquence, put into the
-mouth of one of the angry tribunes.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Marullus.</em> Wherefore rejoice!—What conquest brings he home?</div>
- <div class='line'>What tributaries follow him to Rome,</div>
- <div class='line'>To grace in captive-bonds his chariot-wheels?</div>
- <div class='line'>Oh you hard hearts, you cruel men of Rome!</div>
- <div class='line'>Knew you not Pompey? Many a time and oft</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span>Have you climb’d up to walls and battlements,</div>
- <div class='line'>To towers and windows, yea, to chimney-tops,</div>
- <div class='line'>Your infants in your arms, and there have sat</div>
- <div class='line'>The live-long day with patient expectation,</div>
- <div class='line'>To see great Pompey pass the streets of Rome:</div>
- <div class='line'>And when you saw his chariot but appear,</div>
- <div class='line'>Have you not made an universal shout,</div>
- <div class='line'>That Tyber trembled underneath his banks</div>
- <div class='line'>To hear the replication of your sounds,</div>
- <div class='line'>Made in his concave shores?</div>
- <div class='line'>And do you now put on your best attire?</div>
- <div class='line'>And do you now cull out an holiday?</div>
- <div class='line'>And do you now strew flowers in his way</div>
- <div class='line'>That comes in triumph over Pompey’s blood?</div>
- <div class='line'>Begone——</div>
- <div class='line'>Run to your houses, fall upon your knees,</div>
- <div class='line'>Pray to the Gods to intermit the plague,</div>
- <div class='line'>That needs must light on this ingratitude.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The well-known dialogue between Brutus and Cassius, in which
-the latter breaks the design of the conspiracy to the former, and
-partly gains him over to it, is a noble piece of high-minded declamation.
-Cassius’s insisting on the pretended effeminacy of Cæsar’s
-character, and his description of their swimming across the Tiber
-together, ‘once upon a raw and gusty day,’ are among the finest
-strokes in it. But perhaps the whole is not equal to the short scene
-which follows, when Cæsar enters with his train:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Brutus.</em> The games are done, and Cæsar is returning.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Cassius.</em> As they pass by, pluck Casca by the sleeve,</div>
- <div class='line'>And he will, after his sour fashion, tell you</div>
- <div class='line'>What has proceeded worthy note to day.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Brutus.</em> I will do so; but look you, Cassius—</div>
- <div class='line'>The angry spot doth glow on Cæsar’s brow,</div>
- <div class='line'>And all the rest look like a chidden train.</div>
- <div class='line'>Calphurnia’s cheek is pale; and Cicero</div>
- <div class='line'>Looks with such ferret and such fiery eyes,</div>
- <div class='line'>As we have seen him in the Capitol,</div>
- <div class='line'>Being crost in conference by some senators.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Cassius.</em> Casca will tell us what the matter is.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Cæsar.</em> Antonius——</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Antony.</em> Cæsar?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Cæsar.</em> Let me have men about me that are fat,</div>
- <div class='line'>Sleek-headed men, and such as sleep a-nights:</div>
- <div class='line'>Yon Cassius has a lean and hungry look,</div>
- <div class='line'>He thinks too much; such men are dangerous.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Antony.</em> Fear him not, Cæsar, he’s not dangerous:</div>
- <div class='line'>He is a noble Roman, and well given.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span><em>Cæsar.</em> Would he were fatter; but I fear him not:</div>
- <div class='line'>Yet if my name were liable to fear,</div>
- <div class='line'>I do not know the man I should avoid</div>
- <div class='line'>So soon as that spare Cassius. He reads much;</div>
- <div class='line'>He is a great observer; and he looks</div>
- <div class='line'>Quite through the deeds of men. He loves no plays,</div>
- <div class='line'>As thou dost, Antony; he hears no music:</div>
- <div class='line'>Seldom he smiles, and smiles in such a sort,</div>
- <div class='line'>As if he mock’d himself, and scorn’d his spirit,</div>
- <div class='line'>That could be mov’d to smile at any thing.</div>
- <div class='line'>Such men as he be never at heart’s ease,</div>
- <div class='line'>Whilst they behold a greater than themselves;</div>
- <div class='line'>And therefore are they very dangerous.</div>
- <div class='line'>I rather tell thee what is to be fear’d</div>
- <div class='line'>Than what I fear; for always I am Cæsar.</div>
- <div class='line'>Come on my right hand, for this ear is deaf,</div>
- <div class='line'>And tell me truly what thou think’st of him.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>We know hardly any passage more expressive of the genius of
-Shakespear than this. It is as if he had been actually present, had
-known the different characters and what they thought of one another,
-and had taken down what he heard and saw, their looks, words, and
-gestures, just as they happened.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The character of Mark Antony is farther speculated upon where
-the conspirators deliberate whether he shall fall with Cæsar. Brutus
-is against it—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘And for Mark Antony, think not of him:</div>
- <div class='line'>For he can do no more than Cæsar’s arm,</div>
- <div class='line'>When Cæsar’s head is off.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Cassius.</em> Yet I do fear him:</div>
- <div class='line'>For in th’ ingrafted love he bears to Cæsar——</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Brutus.</em> Alas, good Cassius, do not think of him:</div>
- <div class='line'>If he love Cæsar, all that he can do</div>
- <div class='line'>Is to himself, take thought, and die for Cæsar:</div>
- <div class='line'>And that were much, he should; for he is giv’n</div>
- <div class='line'>To sports, to wildness, and much company.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Trebonius.</em> There is no fear in him; let him not die:</div>
- <div class='line'>For he will live, and laugh at this hereafter.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>They were in the wrong; and Cassius was right.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The honest manliness of Brutus is however sufficient to find out
-the unfitness of Cicero to be included in their enterprise, from his
-affected egotism and literary vanity.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘O, name him not: let us not break with him;</div>
- <div class='line'>For he will never follow anything,</div>
- <div class='line'>That other men begin.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span>His scepticism as to prodigies and his moralising on the weather—‘This
-disturbed sky is not to walk in’—are in the same spirit of
-refined imbecility.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Shakespear has in this play and elsewhere shown the same penetration
-into political character and the springs of public events as into
-those of every-day life. For instance, the whole design of the
-conspirators to liberate their country fails from the generous temper
-and overweening confidence of Brutus in the goodness of their cause
-and the assistance of others. Thus it has always been. Those who
-mean well themselves think well of others, and fall a prey to their
-security. That humanity and honesty which dispose men to resist
-injustice and tyranny render them unfit to cope with the cunning and
-power of those who are opposed to them. The friends of liberty
-trust to the professions of others, because they are themselves sincere,
-and endeavour to reconcile the public good with the least possible
-hurt to its enemies, who have no regard to any thing but their own
-unprincipled ends, and stick at nothing to accomplish them. Cassius
-was better cut out for a conspirator. His heart prompted his head.
-His watchful jealousy made him fear the worst that might happen,
-and his irritability of temper added to his inveteracy of purpose, and
-sharpened his patriotism. The mixed nature of his motives made
-him fitter to contend with bad men. The vices are never so well
-employed as in combating one another. Tyranny and servility are to
-be dealt with after their own fashion: otherwise, they will triumph
-over those who spare them, and finally pronounce their funeral
-panegyric, as Antony did that of Brutus.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘All the conspirators, save only he,</div>
- <div class='line'>Did that they did in envy of great Cæsar:</div>
- <div class='line'>He only in a general honest thought</div>
- <div class='line'>And common good to all, made one of them.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The quarrel between Brutus and Cassius is managed in a masterly
-way. The dramatic fluctuation of passion, the calmness of Brutus,
-the heat of Cassius, are admirably described; and the exclamation of
-Cassius on hearing of the death of Portia, which he does not learn
-till after their reconciliation, ‘How ‘scaped I killing when I crost you
-so?’ gives double force to all that has gone before. The scene
-between Brutus and Portia, where she endeavours to extort the secret
-of the conspiracy from him, is conceived in the most heroical spirit,
-and the burst of tenderness in Brutus—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘You are my true and honourable wife;</div>
- <div class='line'>As dear to me as are the ruddy drops</div>
- <div class='line'>That visit my sad heart’—</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_199'>199</span>is justified by her whole behaviour. Portia’s breathless impatience to
-learn the event of the conspiracy, in the dialogue with Lucius, is full
-of passion. The interest which Portia takes in Brutus and that
-which Calphurnia takes in the fate of Cæsar are discriminated with
-the nicest precision. Mark Antony’s speech over the dead body of
-Cæsar has been justly admired for the mixture of pathos and artifice
-in it: that of Brutus certainly is not so good.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The entrance of the conspirators to the house of Brutus at midnight
-is rendered very impressive. In the midst of this scene, we
-meet with one of those careless and natural digressions which occur so
-frequently and beautifully in Shakespear. After Cassius has introduced
-his friends one by one, Brutus says—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in2'>‘They are all welcome.</div>
- <div class='line'>What watchful cares do interpose themselves</div>
- <div class='line'>Betwixt your eyes and night?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Cassius.</em> Shall I entreat a word? (<em>They whisper.</em>)</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Decius.</em> Here lies the east: doth not the day break here?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Casca.</em> No.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Cinna.</em> O pardon, Sir, it doth; and yon grey lines,</div>
- <div class='line'>That fret the clouds, are messengers of day.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Casca.</em> You shall confess, that you are both deceiv’d:</div>
- <div class='line'>Here, as I point my sword, the sun arises,</div>
- <div class='line'>Which is a great way growing on the south,</div>
- <div class='line'>Weighing the youthful season of the year.</div>
- <div class='line'>Some two months hence, up higher toward the north</div>
- <div class='line'>He first presents his fire, and the high east</div>
- <div class='line'>Stands as the Capitol, directly here.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>We cannot help thinking this graceful familiarity better than all the
-fustian in the world.—The truth of history in <span class='sc'>Julius Cæsar</span> is very
-ably worked up with dramatic effect. The councils of generals, the
-doubtful turns of battles, are represented to the life. The death of
-Brutus is worthy of him—it has the dignity of the Roman senator
-with the firmness of the Stoic philosopher. But what is perhaps
-better than either, is the little incident of his boy, Lucius, falling
-asleep over his instrument, as he is playing to his master in his tent,
-the night before the battle. Nature had played him the same forgetful
-trick once before on the night of the conspiracy. The humanity of
-Brutus is the same on both occasions.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in14'>——‘It is no matter:</div>
- <div class='line'>Enjoy the honey-heavy dew of slumber.</div>
- <div class='line'>Thou hast no figures nor no fantasies,</div>
- <div class='line'>Which busy care draws in the brains of men.</div>
- <div class='line'>Therefore thou sleep’st so sound.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>
- <h3 class='c010'>OTHELLO</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>It has been said that tragedy purifies the affections by terror and
-pity. That is, it substitutes imaginary sympathy for mere selfishness.
-It gives us a high and permanent interest, beyond ourselves, in
-humanity as such. It raises the great, the remote, and the possible
-to an equality with the real, the little and the near. It makes man
-a partaker with his kind. It subdues and softens the stubbornness of
-his will. It teaches him that there are and have been others like
-himself, by showing him as in a glass what they have felt, thought,
-and done. It opens the chambers of the human heart. It leaves
-nothing indifferent to us that can affect our common nature. It
-excites our sensibility by exhibiting the passions wound up to the utmost
-pitch by the power of imagination or the temptation of circumstances;
-and corrects their fatal excesses in ourselves by pointing to the greater
-extent of sufferings and of crimes to which they have led others.
-Tragedy creates a balance of the affections. It makes us thoughtful
-spectators in the lists of life. It is the refiner of the species; a
-discipline of humanity. The habitual study of poetry and works of
-imagination is one chief part of a well-grounded education. A taste
-for liberal art is necessary to complete the character of a gentleman.
-Science alone is hard and mechanical. It exercises the understanding
-upon things out of ourselves, while it leaves the affections unemployed,
-or engrossed with our own immediate, narrow interests.—<span class='sc'>Othello</span>
-furnishes an illustration of these remarks. It excites our sympathy in
-an extraordinary degree. The moral it conveys has a closer application
-to the concerns of human life than that of almost any other of
-Shakespear’s plays. ‘It comes directly home to the bosoms and
-business of men.’ The pathos in <cite>Lear</cite> is indeed more dreadful and
-overpowering: but it is less natural, and less of every day’s occurrence.
-We have not the same degree of sympathy with the passions
-described in <cite>Macbeth</cite>. The interest in <cite>Hamlet</cite> is more remote and
-reflex. That of <span class='sc'>Othello</span> is at once equally profound and affecting.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The picturesque contrasts of character in this play are almost as
-remarkable as the depth of the passion. The Moor Othello, the
-gentle Desdemona, the villain Iago, the good-natured Cassio, the fool
-Roderigo, present a range and variety of character as striking and
-palpable as that produced by the opposition of costume in a picture.
-Their distinguishing qualities stand out to the mind’s eye, so that
-even when we are not thinking of their actions or sentiments, the idea
-of their persons is still as present to us as ever. These characters and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>the images they stamp upon the mind are the farthest asunder possible,
-the distance between them is immense: yet the compass of knowledge
-and invention which the poet has shown in embodying these extreme
-creations of his genius is only greater than the truth and felicity with
-which he has identified each character with itself, or blended their
-different qualities together in the same story. What a contrast the
-character of Othello forms to that of Iago! At the same time, the
-force of conception with which these two figures are opposed to each
-other is rendered still more intense by the complete consistency with
-which the traits of each character are brought out in a state of the
-highest finishing. The making one black and the other white, the
-one unprincipled, the other unfortunate in the extreme, would have
-answered the common purposes of effect, and satisfied the ambition of
-an ordinary painter of character. Shakespear has laboured the finer
-shades of difference in both with as much care and skill as if he had
-had to depend on the execution alone for the success of his design. On
-the other hand, Desdemona and Æmilia are not meant to be opposed
-with anything like strong contrast to each other. Both are, to outward
-appearance, characters of common life, not more distinguished
-than women usually are, by difference of rank and situation. The
-difference of their thoughts and sentiments is however laid open, their
-minds are separated from each other by signs as plain and as little to
-be mistaken as the complexions of their husbands.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The movement of the passion in Othello is exceedingly different
-from that of Macbeth. In Macbeth there is a violent struggle
-between opposite feelings, between ambition and the stings of conscience,
-almost from first to last: in Othello, the doubtful conflict
-between contrary passions, though dreadful, continues only for a short
-time, and the chief interest is excited by the alternate ascendancy of
-different passions, by the entire and unforeseen change from the
-fondest love and most unbounded confidence to the tortures of jealousy
-and the madness of hatred. The revenge of Othello, after it has
-once taken thorough possession of his mind, never quits it, but grows
-stronger and stronger at every moment of its delay. The nature of
-the Moor is noble, confiding, tender, and generous; but his blood is
-of the most inflammable kind; and being once roused by a sense of his
-wrongs, he is stopped by no considerations of remorse or pity till he
-has given a loose to all the dictates of his rage and his despair. It is
-in working his noble nature up to this extremity through rapid but
-gradual transitions, in raising passion to its height from the smallest
-beginnings and in spite of all obstacles, in painting the expiring
-conflict between love and hatred, tenderness and resentment, jealousy
-and remorse, in unfolding the strength and the weakness of our nature,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>in uniting sublimity of thought with the anguish of the keenest woe,
-in putting in motion the various impulses that agitate this our mortal
-being, and at last blending them in that noble tide of deep and
-sustained passion, impetuous but majestic, that ‘flows on to the
-Propontic, and knows no ebb,’ that Shakespear has shown the mastery
-of his genius and of his power over the human heart. The third act
-of <span class='sc'>Othello</span> is his finest display, not of knowledge or passion separately,
-but of the two combined, of the knowledge of character with the
-expression of passion, of consummate art in the keeping up of appearances
-with the profound workings of nature, and the convulsive movements
-of uncontroulable agony, of the power of inflicting torture and
-of suffering it. Not only is the tumult of passion in Othello’s mind
-heaved up from the very bottom of the soul, but every the slightest
-undulation of feeling is seen on the surface, as it arises from the
-impulses of imagination or the malicious suggestions of Iago. The
-progressive preparation for the catastrophe is wonderfully managed
-from the Moor’s first gallant recital of the story of his love,
-of ‘the spells and witchcraft he had used,’ from his unlooked-for and
-romantic success, the fond satisfaction with which he dotes on his
-own happiness, the unreserved tenderness of Desdemona and her
-innocent importunities in favour of Cassio, irritating the suspicions
-instilled into her husband’s mind by the perfidy of Iago, and rankling
-there to poison, till he loses all command of himself, and his rage can
-only be appeased by blood. She is introduced, just before Iago
-begins to put his scheme in practice, pleading for Cassio with all
-the thoughtless gaiety of friendship and winning confidence in the love
-of Othello.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘What! Michael Cassio?</div>
- <div class='line'>That came a wooing with you, and so many a time,</div>
- <div class='line'>When I have spoke of you dispraisingly,</div>
- <div class='line'>Hath ta’en your part, to have so much to do</div>
- <div class='line'>To bring him in?—Why this is not a boon:</div>
- <div class='line'>’Tis as I should intreat you wear your gloves,</div>
- <div class='line'>Or feed on nourishing meats, or keep you warm;</div>
- <div class='line'>Or sue to you to do a peculiar profit</div>
- <div class='line'>To your person. Nay, when I have a suit,</div>
- <div class='line'>Wherein I mean to touch your love indeed,</div>
- <div class='line'>It shall be full of poise, and fearful to be granted.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Othello’s confidence, at first only staggered by broken hints and
-insinuations, recovers itself at sight of Desdemona; and he exclaims</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘If she be false, O then Heav’n mocks itself:</div>
- <div class='line'>I’ll not believe it.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span>But presently after, on brooding over his suspicions by himself, and
-yielding to his apprehensions of the worst, his smothered jealousy
-breaks out into open fury, and he returns to demand satisfaction of
-Iago like a wild beast stung with the envenomed shaft of the hunters.
-‘Look where he comes,’ etc. In this state of exasperation and
-violence, after the first paroxysms of his grief and tenderness have had
-their vent in that passionate apostrophe, ‘I felt not Cassio’s kisses on
-her lips,’ Iago, by false aspersions, and by presenting the most
-revolting images to his mind,<a id='r65' /><a href='#f65' class='c012'><sup>[65]</sup></a> easily turns the storm of passion from
-himself against Desdemona, and works him up into a trembling agony
-of doubt and fear, in which he abandons all his love and hopes in
-a breath.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Now do I see ’tis true. Look here, Iago,</div>
- <div class='line'>All my fond love thus do I blow to Heav’n. ’Tis gone.</div>
- <div class='line'>Arise black vengeance from the hollow hell;</div>
- <div class='line'>Yield up, O love, thy crown and hearted throne</div>
- <div class='line'>To tyrannous hate! Swell bosom with thy fraught;</div>
- <div class='line'>For ’tis of aspicks’ tongues.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>From this time, his raging thoughts ‘never look back, ne’er ebb
-to humble love,’ till his revenge is sure of its object, the painful
-regrets and involuntary recollections of past circumstances which
-cross his mind amidst the dim trances of passion, aggravating the
-sense of his wrongs, but not shaking his purpose. Once indeed,
-where Iago shows him Cassio with the handkerchief in his hand, and
-making sport (as he thinks) of his misfortunes, the intolerable bitterness
-of his feelings, the extreme sense of shame, makes him fall to
-praising her accomplishments and relapse into a momentary fit of
-weakness, ‘Yet, oh the pity of it, Iago, the pity of it!’ This
-returning fondness however only serves, as it is managed by Iago,
-to whet his revenge, and set his heart more against her. In his
-conversations with Desdemona, the persuasion of her guilt and the
-immediate proofs of her duplicity seem to irritate his resentment and
-aversion to her; but in the scene immediately preceding her death,
-the recollection of his love returns upon him in all its tenderness and
-force; and after her death, he all at once forgets his wrongs in the
-sudden and irreparable sense of his loss.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘My wife! My wife! What wife? I have no wife.</div>
- <div class='line'>Oh insupportable! Oh heavy hour!’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_204'>204</span>This happens before he is assured of her innocence; but afterwards
-his remorse is as dreadful as his revenge has been, and yields only to
-fixed and death-like despair. His farewell speech, before he kills himself,
-in which he conveys his reasons to the senate for the murder of
-his wife, is equal to the first speech in which he gave them an account
-of his courtship of her, and ‘his whole course of love.’ Such an
-ending was alone worthy of such a commencement.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>If any thing could add to the force of our sympathy with Othello,
-or compassion for his fate, it would be the frankness and generosity
-of his nature, which so little deserve it. When Iago first begins to
-practise upon his unsuspecting friendship, he answers—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in10'>——‘’Tis not to make me jealous,</div>
- <div class='line'>To say my wife is fair, feeds well, loves company,</div>
- <div class='line'>Is free of speech, sings, plays, and dances well;</div>
- <div class='line'>Where virtue is, these are most virtuous.</div>
- <div class='line'>Nor from my own weak merits will I draw</div>
- <div class='line'>The smallest fear or doubt of her revolt,</div>
- <div class='line'>For she had eyes and chose me.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>This character is beautifully (and with affecting simplicity) confirmed
-by what Desdemona herself says of him to Æmilia after she has lost
-the handkerchief, the first pledge of his love to her.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Believe me, I had rather have lost my purse</div>
- <div class='line'>Full of cruzadoes. And but my noble Moor</div>
- <div class='line'>Is true of mind, and made of no such baseness,</div>
- <div class='line'>As jealous creatures are, it were enough</div>
- <div class='line'>To put him to ill thinking.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Æmilia.</em> Is he not jealous?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Desdemona.</em> Who he? I think the sun where he was born</div>
- <div class='line'>Drew all such humours from him.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>In a short speech of Æmilia’s, there occurs one of those side-intimations
-of the fluctuations of passion which we seldom meet with
-but in Shakespear. After Othello has resolved upon the death of
-his wife, and bids her dismiss her attendant for the night, she
-answers,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘I will, my Lord.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Æmilia.</em> How goes it now? <em>He looks gentler than he did.</em>’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Shakespear has here put into half a line what some authors would
-have spun out into ten set speeches.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The character of Desdemona is inimitable both in itself, and as it
-appears in contrast with Othello’s groundless jealousy, and with the
-foul conspiracy of which she is the innocent victim. Her beauty
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span>and external graces are only indirectly glanced at: we see ‘her
-visage in her mind’; her character every where predominates over
-her person.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘A maiden never bold:</div>
- <div class='line'>Of spirit so still and quiet, that her motion</div>
- <div class='line'>Blush’d at itself.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>There is one fine compliment paid to her by Cassio, who exclaims
-triumphantly when she comes ashore at Cyprus after the storm,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Tempests themselves, high seas, and howling winds,</div>
- <div class='line'>As having sense of beauty, do omit</div>
- <div class='line'>Their mortal natures, letting safe go by</div>
- <div class='line'>The divine Desdemona.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>In general, as is the case with most of Shakespear’s females, we
-lose sight of her personal charms in her attachment and devotedness
-to her husband. ‘She is subdued even to the very quality of her
-lord’; and to Othello’s ‘honours and his valiant parts her soul and
-fortunes consecrates.’ The lady protests so much herself, and she
-is as good as her word. The truth of conception, with which
-timidity and boldness are united in the same character, is marvellous.
-The extravagance of her resolutions, the pertinacity of her affections,
-may be said to arise out of the gentleness of her nature. They
-imply an unreserved reliance on the purity of her own intentions, an
-entire surrender of her fears to her love, a knitting of herself (heart
-and soul) to the fate of another. Bating the commencement of her
-passion, which is a little fantastical and headstrong (though even that
-may perhaps be consistently accounted for from her inability to resist
-a rising inclination<a id='r66' /><a href='#f66' class='c012'><sup>[66]</sup></a>) her whole character consists in having no will
-of her own, no prompter but her obedience. Her romantic turn is
-only a consequence of the domestic and practical part of her disposition;
-and instead of following Othello to the wars, she would gladly
-have ‘remained at home a moth of peace,’ if her husband could have
-staid with her. Her resignation and angelic sweetness of temper
-do not desert her at the last. The scenes in which she laments and
-tries to account for Othello’s estrangement from her are exquisitely
-beautiful. After he has struck her, and called her names, she says,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in16'>——‘Alas, Iago,</div>
- <div class='line'>What shall I do to win my lord again?</div>
- <div class='line'>Good friend, go to him; for by this light of heaven,</div>
- <div class='line'>I know not how I lost him. Here I kneel;</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_206'>206</span>If e’er my will did trespass ‘gainst his love,</div>
- <div class='line'>Either in discourse, or thought, or actual deed,</div>
- <div class='line'>Or that mine eyes, mine ears, or any sense</div>
- <div class='line'>Delighted them on any other form;</div>
- <div class='line'>Or that I do not, and ever did,</div>
- <div class='line'>And ever will, though he do shake me off</div>
- <div class='line'>To beggarly divorcement, love him dearly,</div>
- <div class='line'>Comfort forswear me. Unkindness may do much,</div>
- <div class='line'>And his unkindness may defeat my life,</div>
- <div class='line'>But never taint my love.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Iago.</em> I pray you be content: ’tis but his humour.</div>
- <div class='line'>The business of the state does him offence.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Desdemona.</em> If ‘twere no other!——</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The scene which follows with Æmilia and the song of the
-Willow, are equally beautiful, and show the author’s extreme power
-of varying the expression of passion, in all its moods and in all
-circumstances.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Æmilia.</em> Would you had never seen him.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Desdemona.</em> So would not I: my love doth so approve him,</div>
- <div class='line'>That even his stubbornness, his checks, his frowns,</div>
- <div class='line'>Have grace and favour in them,’ etc.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Not the unjust suspicions of Othello, not Iago’s unprovoked treachery,
-place Desdemona in a more amiable or interesting light than the
-conversation (half earnest, half jest) between her and Æmilia on the
-common behaviour of women to their husbands. This dialogue takes
-place just before the last fatal scene. If Othello had overheard it,
-it would have prevented the whole catastrophe; but then it would
-have spoiled the play.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The character of Iago is one of the supererogations of Shakespear’s
-genius. Some persons, more nice than wise, have thought this whole
-character unnatural, because his villainy is <em>without a sufficient motive</em>.
-Shakespear, who was as good a philosopher as he was a poet, thought
-otherwise. He knew that the love of power, which is another name
-for the love of mischief, is natural to man. He would know this as
-well or better than if it had been demonstrated to him by a logical
-diagram, merely from seeing children paddle in the dirt or kill flies
-for sport. Iago in fact belongs to a class of character, common to
-Shakespear and at the same time peculiar to him; whose heads are
-as acute and active as their hearts are hard and callous. Iago is to
-be sure an extreme instance of the kind; that is to say, of diseased
-intellectual activity, with the most perfect indifference to moral good
-or evil, or rather with a decided preference of the latter, because it
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span>falls more readily in with his favourite propensity, gives greater zest
-to his thoughts and scope to his actions. He is quite or nearly as
-indifferent to his own fate as to that of others; he runs all risks for
-a trifling and doubtful advantage; and is himself the dupe and victim
-of his ruling passion—an insatiable craving after action of the most
-difficult and dangerous kind. ‘Our ancient’ is a philosopher, who
-fancies that a lie that kills has more point in it than an alliteration or
-an antithesis; who thinks a fatal experiment on the peace of a family
-a better thing than watching the palpitations in the heart of a flea in
-a microscope; who plots the ruin of his friends as an exercise for his
-ingenuity, and stabs men in the dark to prevent <em>ennui</em>. His gaiety,
-such as it is, arises from the success of his treachery; his ease from
-the torture he has inflicted on others. He is an amateur of tragedy
-in real life; and instead of employing his invention on imaginary
-characters, or long-forgotten incidents, he takes the bolder and more
-desperate course of getting up his plot at home, casts the principal
-parts among his nearest friends and connections, and rehearses it in
-downright earnest, with steady nerves and unabated resolution. We
-will just give an illustration or two.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>One of his most characteristic speeches is that immediately after
-the marriage of Othello.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Roderigo.</em> What a full fortune does the thick lips owe,</div>
- <div class='line'>If he can carry her thus!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Iago.</em> Call up her father:</div>
- <div class='line'>Rouse him (<cite>Othello</cite>) make after him, poison his delight,</div>
- <div class='line'>Proclaim him in the streets, incense her kinsmen,</div>
- <div class='line'>And tho’ he in a fertile climate dwell,</div>
- <div class='line'>Plague him with flies: tho’ that his joy be joy,</div>
- <div class='line'>Yet throw such changes of vexation on it,</div>
- <div class='line'>As it may lose some colour.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the next passage, his imagination runs riot in the mischief he is
-plotting, and breaks out into the wildness and impetuosity of real
-enthusiasm.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Roderigo.</em> Here is her father’s house: I’ll call aloud.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Iago.</em> Do, with like timourous accent and dire yell</div>
- <div class='line'>As when, by night and negligence, the fire</div>
- <div class='line'>Is spied in populous cities.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>One of his most favourite topics, on which he is rich indeed, and
-in descanting on which his spleen serves him for a Muse, is the disproportionate
-match between Desdemona and the Moor. This is a
-clue to the character of the lady which he is by no means ready to
-part with. It is brought forward in the first scene, and he recurs to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span>it, when in answer to his insinuations against Desdemona, Roderigo
-says,</p>
-
-<p class='c016'>‘I cannot believe that in her—she’s full of most blest conditions.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Iago.</em> Bless’d fig’s end. The wine she drinks is made of grapes. If
-she had been blest, she would never have married the Moor.’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And again with still more spirit and fatal effect afterwards, when he
-turns this very suggestion arising in Othello’s own breast to her
-prejudice.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Othello.</em> And yet how nature erring from itself—</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Iago.</em> Ay, there’s the point;—as to be bold with you,</div>
- <div class='line'>Not to affect many proposed matches</div>
- <div class='line'>Of her own clime, complexion, and degree,’ etc.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>This is probing to the quick. Iago here turns the character of
-poor Desdemona, as it were, inside out. It is certain that nothing
-but the genius of Shakespear could have preserved the entire interest
-and delicacy of the part, and have even drawn an additional elegance
-and dignity from the peculiar circumstances in which she is placed.—The
-habitual licentiousness of Iago’s conversation is not to be traced
-to the pleasure he takes in gross or lascivious images, but to his
-desire of finding out the worst side of everything, and of proving
-himself an over-match for appearances. He has none of ‘the milk
-of human kindness’ in his composition. His imagination rejects
-every thing that has not a strong infusion of the most unpalatable
-ingredients; his mind digests only poisons. Virtue or goodness or
-whatever has the least ‘relish of salvation in it,’ is, to his depraved
-appetite, sickly and insipid: and he even resents the good opinion
-entertained of his own integrity, as if it were an affront cast on the
-masculine sense and spirit of his character. Thus at the meeting
-between Othello and Desdemona, he exclaims—‘Oh, you are well
-tuned now: but I’ll set down the pegs that make this music, <em>as
-honest as I am</em>‘—his character of <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">bonhomme</span></i><a id='t208'></a> not sitting at all easy
-upon him. In the scenes, where he tries to work Othello to his
-purpose, he is proportionably guarded, insidious, dark, and deliberate.
-We believe nothing ever came up to the profound dissimulation and
-dextrous artifice of the well-known dialogue in the third act, where
-he first enters upon the execution of his design.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Iago.</em> My noble lord.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Othello.</em> What dost thou say, Iago?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Iago.</em> Did Michael Cassio,</div>
- <div class='line'>When you woo’d my lady, know of your love?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Othello.</em> He did from first to last.</div>
- <div class='line'>Why dost thou ask?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span><em>Iago.</em> But for a satisfaction of my thought,</div>
- <div class='line'>No further harm.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Othello.</em> Why of thy thought, Iago?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Iago.</em> I did not think he had been acquainted with it.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Othello.</em> O yes, and went between us very oft—</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Iago.</em> Indeed!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Othello.</em> Indeed? Ay, indeed. Discern’st thou aught of that?</div>
- <div class='line'>Is he not honest?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Iago.</em> Honest, my lord?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Othello.</em> Honest? Ay, honest.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Iago.</em> My lord, for aught I know.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Othello.</em> What do’st thou think?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Iago.</em> Think, my lord!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Othello.</em> Think, my lord! Alas, thou echo’st me,</div>
- <div class='line'>As if there was some monster in thy thought</div>
- <div class='line'>Too hideous to be shewn.’—</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The stops and breaks, the deep workings of treachery under the
-mask of love and honesty, the anxious watchfulness, the cool earnestness,
-and if we may so say, the <em>passion</em> of hypocrisy, marked in every
-line, receive their last finishing in that inconceivable burst of pretended
-indignation at Othello’s doubts of his sincerity.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘O grace! O Heaven forgive me!</div>
- <div class='line'>Are you a man? Have you a soul or sense?</div>
- <div class='line'>God be wi’ you; take mine office. O wretched fool,</div>
- <div class='line'>That lov’st to make thine honesty a vice!</div>
- <div class='line'>Oh monstrous world! Take note, take note, O world!</div>
- <div class='line'>To be direct and honest, is not safe.</div>
- <div class='line'>I thank you for this profit, and from hence</div>
- <div class='line'>I’ll love no friend, since love breeds such offence.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>If Iago is detestable enough when he has business on his hands
-and all his engines at work, he is still worse when he has nothing
-to do, and we only see into the hollowness of his heart. His
-indifference when Othello falls into a swoon, is perfectly diabolical.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Iago.</em> How is it, General? Have you not hurt your head?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Othello.</em> Do’st thou mock me?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Iago.</em> I mock you not, by Heaven,’ etc.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The part indeed would hardly be tolerated, even as a foil to the
-virtue and generosity of the other characters in the play, but for its
-indefatigable industry and inexhaustible resources, which divert the
-attention of the spectator (as well as his own) from the end he has
-in view to the means by which it must be accomplished.—Edmund
-the Bastard in <cite>Lear</cite> is something of the same character, placed in
-less prominent circumstances. Zanga is a vulgar caricature of it.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span>
- <h3 class='c010'>TIMON OF ATHENS</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='sc'>Timon of Athens</span> always appeared to us to be written with as intense
-a feeling of his subject as any one play of Shakespear. It is one of
-the few in which he seems to be in earnest throughout, never to trifle
-nor go out of his way. He does not relax in his efforts, nor lose
-sight of the unity of his design. It is the only play of our author in
-which spleen is the predominant feeling of the mind. It is as much
-a satire as a play: and contains some of the finest pieces of invective
-possible to be conceived, both in the snarling, captious answers of the
-cynic Apemantus, and in the impassioned and more terrible imprecations
-of Timon. The latter remind the classical reader of the force
-and swelling impetuosity of the moral declamations in <em>Juvenal</em>, while
-the former have all the keenness and caustic severity of the old Stoic
-philosophers. The soul of Diogenes appears to have been seated on
-the lips of Apemantus. The churlish profession of misanthropy in
-the cynic is contrasted with the profound feeling of it in Timon, and
-also with the soldier-like and determined resentment of Alcibiades
-against his countrymen, who have banished him, though this forms
-only an incidental episode in the tragedy.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The fable consists of a single event;—of the transition from the
-highest pomp and profusion of artificial refinement to the most abject
-state of savage life, and privation of all social intercourse. The
-change is as rapid as it is complete; nor is the description of the rich
-and generous Timon, banqueting in gilded palaces, pampered by every
-luxury, prodigal of his hospitality, courted by crowds of flatterers,
-poets, painters, lords, ladies, who—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Follow his strides, his lobbies fill with tendance,</div>
- <div class='line'>Rain sacrificial whisperings in his ear;</div>
- <div class='line'>And through him drink the free air’—</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>more striking than that of the sudden falling off of his friends and
-fortune, and his naked exposure in a wild forest digging roots from
-the earth for his sustenance, with a lofty spirit of self-denial, and
-bitter scorn of the world, which raise him higher in our esteem than
-the dazzling gloss of prosperity could do. He grudges himself the
-means of life, and is only busy in preparing his grave. How forcibly
-is the difference between what he was, and what he is, described in
-Apemantus’s taunting questions, when he comes to reproach him with
-the change in his way of life!</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in18'><span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span>——‘What, think’st thou,</div>
- <div class='line'>That the bleak air, thy boisterous chamberlain,</div>
- <div class='line'>Will put thy shirt on warm? will these moist trees</div>
- <div class='line'>That have outlived the eagle, page thy heels,</div>
- <div class='line'>And skip when thou point’st out? will the cold brook,</div>
- <div class='line'>Candied with ice, caudle thy morning taste</div>
- <div class='line'>To cure thy o’er-night’s surfeit? Call the creatures,</div>
- <div class='line'>Whose naked natures live in all the spight</div>
- <div class='line'>Of wreakful heav’n, whose bare unhoused trunks,</div>
- <div class='line'>To the conflicting elements expos’d,</div>
- <div class='line'>Answer mere nature, bid them flatter thee.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The manners are every where preserved with distinct truth. The
-poet and painter are very skilfully played off against one another, both
-affecting great attention to the other, and each taken up with his own
-vanity, and the superiority of his own art. Shakespear has put into
-the mouth of the former a very lively description of the genius of
-poetry and of his own in particular.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in12'>——‘A thing slipt idly from me.</div>
- <div class='line'>Our poesy is as a gum, which issues</div>
- <div class='line'>From whence ’tis nourish’d. The fire i’ th’ flint</div>
- <div class='line'>Shews not till it be struck: our gentle flame</div>
- <div class='line'>Provokes itself—and like the current flies</div>
- <div class='line'>Each bound it chafes.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The hollow friendship and shuffling evasions of the Athenian lords,
-their smooth professions and pitiful ingratitude, are very satisfactorily
-exposed, as well as the different disguises to which the meanness of
-self-love resorts in such cases to hide a want of generosity and good
-faith. The lurking selfishness of Apemantus does not pass undetected
-amidst the grossness of his sarcasms and his contempt for the
-pretensions of others. Even the two courtezans who accompany
-Alcibiades to the cave of Timon are very characteristically sketched;
-and the thieves who come to visit him are also ‘true men’ in their
-way.—An exception to this general picture of selfish depravity is
-found in the old and honest steward Flavius, to whom Timon pays
-a full tribute of tenderness. Shakespear was unwilling to draw a
-picture ‘<em>ugly all over with hypocrisy</em>.’ He owed this character to the
-good-natured solicitations of his Muse. His mind might well have
-been said to be the ‘sphere of humanity.’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The moral sententiousness of this play equals that of Lord Bacon’s
-Treatise on the Wisdom of the Ancients, and is indeed seasoned with
-greater variety. Every topic of contempt or indignation is here
-exhausted; but while the sordid licentiousness of Apemantus, which
-turns every thing to gall and bitterness, shews only the natural virulence
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span>of his temper and antipathy to good or evil alike, Timon does
-not utter an imprecation without betraying the extravagant workings
-of disappointed passion, of love altered to hate. Apemantus sees
-nothing good in any object, and exaggerates whatever is disgusting:
-Timon is tormented with the perpetual contrast between things and
-appearances, between the fresh, tempting outside and the rottenness
-within, and invokes mischiefs on the heads of mankind proportioned
-to the sense of his wrongs and of their treacheries. He impatiently
-cries out, when he finds the gold,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘This yellow slave</div>
- <div class='line'>Will knit and break religions; bless the accurs’d;</div>
- <div class='line'>Make the hoar leprosy ador’d; place thieves,</div>
- <div class='line'>And give them title, knee, and approbation,</div>
- <div class='line'>With senators on the bench; this is it,</div>
- <div class='line'>That makes the wappen’d widow wed again;</div>
- <div class='line'>She, whom the spital-house</div>
- <div class='line'>Would cast the gorge at, <em>this embalms and spices</em></div>
- <div class='line'><em>To th’ April day again</em>.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>One of his most dreadful imprecations is that which occurs immediately
-on his leaving Athens.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Let me look back upon thee, O thou wall,</div>
- <div class='line'>That girdlest in those wolves! Dive in the earth,</div>
- <div class='line'>And fence not Athens! Matrons, turn incontinent;</div>
- <div class='line'>Obedience fail in children; slaves and fools</div>
- <div class='line'>Pluck the grave wrinkled senate from the bench,</div>
- <div class='line'>And minister in their steads. To general filths</div>
- <div class='line'>Convert o’ th’ instant green virginity!</div>
- <div class='line'>Do ‘t in your parents’ eyes. Bankrupts, hold fast;</div>
- <div class='line'>Rather than render back, out with your knives,</div>
- <div class='line'>And cut your trusters’ throats! Bound servants, steal:</div>
- <div class='line'>Large-handed robbers your grave masters are</div>
- <div class='line'>And pill by law. Maid, to thy master’s bed:</div>
- <div class='line'>Thy mistress is o’ th’ brothel. Son of sixteen,</div>
- <div class='line'>Pluck the lin’d crutch from thy old limping sire,</div>
- <div class='line'>And with it beat his brains out! Fear and piety,</div>
- <div class='line'>Religion to the Gods, peace, justice, truth,</div>
- <div class='line'>Domestic awe, night-rest, and neighbourhood,</div>
- <div class='line'>Instructions, manners, mysteries and trades,</div>
- <div class='line'>Degrees, observances, customs and laws,</div>
- <div class='line'>Decline to your confounding contraries;</div>
- <div class='line'>And let confusion live!—Plagues, incident to men,</div>
- <div class='line'>Your potent and infectious fevers heap</div>
- <div class='line'>On Athens, ripe for stroke! Thou cold sciatica,</div>
- <div class='line'>Cripple our senators, that their limbs may halt</div>
- <div class='line'>As lamely as their manners! Lust and liberty</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span>Creep in the minds and marrows of our youth,</div>
- <div class='line'>That ‘gainst the stream of virtue they may strive,</div>
- <div class='line'>And drown themselves in riot! Itches, blains,</div>
- <div class='line'>Sow all th’ Athenian bosoms; and their crop</div>
- <div class='line'>Be general leprosy: breath infect breath,</div>
- <div class='line'>That their society (as their friendship) may</div>
- <div class='line'>Be merely poison!’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Timon is here just as ideal in his passion for ill as he had been
-before in his belief of good, Apemantus was satisfied with the
-mischief existing in the world, and with his own ill-nature. One
-of the most decisive intimations of Timon’s morbid jealousy of
-appearances is in his answer to Apemantus, who asks him,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘What things in the world can’st thou nearest compare with thy flatterers?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Timon.</em> Women nearest: but men, men are the things themselves.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Apemantus, it is said, ‘loved few things better than to abhor himself.’
-This is not the case with Timon, who neither loves to abhor
-himself nor others. All his vehement misanthropy is forced, up-hill
-work. From the slippery turns of fortune, from the turmoils of
-passion and adversity, he wishes to sink into the quiet of the grave.
-On that subject his thoughts are intent, on that he finds time and
-place to grow romantic. He digs his own grave by the sea-shore;
-contrives his funeral ceremonies amidst the pomp of desolation, and
-builds his mausoleum of the elements.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Come not to me again; but say to Athens,</div>
- <div class='line'>Timon hath made his everlasting mansion</div>
- <div class='line'>Upon the beached verge of the salt flood;</div>
- <div class='line'>Which once a-day with his embossed froth</div>
- <div class='line'>The turbulent surge shall cover.—Thither come,</div>
- <div class='line'>And let my grave-stone be your oracle.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>And again, Alcibiades, after reading his epitaph, says of him,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘These well express in thee thy latter spirits:</div>
- <div class='line'>Though thou abhorred’st in us our human griefs,</div>
- <div class='line'>Scorn’d’st our brain’s flow, and those our droplets, which</div>
- <div class='line'>From niggard nature fall; yet rich conceit</div>
- <div class='line'>Taught thee to make vast Neptune weep for aye</div>
- <div class='line'>On thy low grave’——</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>thus making the winds his funeral dirge, his mourner the murmuring
-ocean; and seeking in the everlasting solemnities of nature oblivion
-of the transitory splendour of his life-time.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_214'>214</span>
- <h3 class='c010'>CORIOLANUS</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>Shakespear has in this play shewn himself well versed in history and
-state-affairs. <span class='sc'>Coriolanus</span> is a storehouse of political common-places.
-Any one who studies it may save himself the trouble of reading
-Burke’s Reflections, or Paine’s Rights of Man, or the Debates in
-both Houses of Parliament since the French Revolution or our own.
-The arguments for and against aristocracy or democracy, on the
-privileges of the few and the claims of the many, on liberty and
-slavery, power and the abuse of it, peace and war, are here very ably
-handled, with the spirit of a poet and the acuteness of a philosopher.
-Shakespear himself seems to have had a leaning to the arbitrary side
-of the question, perhaps from some feeling of contempt for his own
-origin; and to have spared no occasion of baiting the rabble. What
-he says of them is very true: what he says of their betters is also
-very true, though he dwells less upon it.—The cause of the people
-is indeed but little calculated as a subject for poetry: it admits of
-rhetoric, which goes into argument and explanation, but it presents
-no immediate or distinct images to the mind, ‘no jutting frieze,
-buttress, or coigne of vantage’ for poetry ‘to make its pendant bed
-and procreant cradle in.’ The language of poetry naturally falls in
-with the language of power. The imagination is an exaggerating
-and exclusive faculty: it takes from one thing to add to another:
-it accumulates circumstances together to give the greatest possible
-effect to a favourite object. The understanding is a dividing and
-measuring faculty: it judges of things not according to their immediate
-impression on the mind, but according to their relations to one
-another. The one is a monopolising faculty, which seeks the greatest
-quantity of present excitement by inequality and disproportion; the
-other is a distributive faculty, which seeks the greatest quantity of
-ultimate good, by justice and proportion. The one is an aristocratical,
-the other a republican faculty. The principle of poetry is a
-very anti-levelling principle. It aims at effect, it exists by contrast.
-It admits of no medium. It is every thing by excess. It rises above
-the ordinary standard of sufferings and crimes. It presents a dazzling
-appearance. It shows its head turreted, crowned, and crested. Its
-front is gilt and blood-stained. Before it ‘it carries noise, and behind
-it leaves tears.’ It has its altars and its victims, sacrifices, human
-sacrifices. Kings, priests, nobles, are its train-bearers, tyrants and
-slaves its executioners.—‘Carnage is its daughter.’—Poetry is right-royal.
-It puts the individual for the species, the one above the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_215'>215</span>infinite many, might before right. A lion hunting a flock of sheep
-or a herd of wild asses is a more poetical object than they; and we
-even take part with the lordly beast, because our vanity or some other
-feeling makes us disposed to place ourselves in the situation of the
-strongest party. So we feel some concern for the poor citizens of
-Rome when they meet together to compare their wants and grievances,
-till Coriolanus comes in and with blows and big words drives
-this set of ‘poor rats,’ this rascal scum, to their homes and beggary
-before him. There is nothing heroical in a multitude of miserable
-rogues not wishing to be starved, or complaining that they are like
-to be so: but when a single man comes forward to brave their cries
-and to make them submit to the last indignities, from mere pride and
-self-will, our admiration of his prowess is immediately converted into
-contempt for their pusillanimity. The insolence of power is stronger
-than the plea of necessity. The tame submission to usurped authority
-or even the natural resistance to it has nothing to excite or flatter
-the imagination: it is the assumption of a right to insult or oppress
-others that carries an imposing air of superiority with it. We had
-rather be the oppressor than the oppressed. The love of power in
-ourselves and the admiration of it in others are both natural to man:
-the one makes him a tyrant, the other a slave. Wrong dressed out
-in pride, pomp, and circumstance, has more attraction than abstract
-right.—Coriolanus complains of the fickleness of the people: yet,
-the instant he cannot gratify his pride and obstinacy at their expense,
-he turns his arms against his country. If his country was not worth
-defending, why did he build his pride on its defence? He is a conqueror
-and a hero; he conquers other countries, and makes this a
-plea for enslaving his own; and when he is prevented from doing so,
-he leagues with its enemies to destroy his country. He rates the
-people ‘as if he were a God to punish, and not a man of their infirmity.’
-He scoffs at one of their tribunes for maintaining their
-rights and franchises: ‘Mark you his absolute <em>shall</em>?’ not marking
-his own absolute <em>will</em> to take every thing from them, his impatience
-of the slightest opposition to his own pretensions being in proportion
-to their arrogance and absurdity. If the great and powerful had the
-beneficence and wisdom of Gods, then all this would have been well:
-if with a greater knowledge of what is good for the people, they had
-as great a care for their interest as they have themselves, if they were
-seated above the world, sympathising with the welfare, but not feeling
-the passions of men, receiving neither good nor hurt from them, but
-bestowing their benefits as free gifts on them, they might then rule
-over them like another Providence. But this is not the case.
-Coriolanus is unwilling that the senate should shew their ‘cares’
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_216'>216</span>for the people, lest their ‘cares’ should be construed into ‘fears,’
-to the subversion of all due authority; and he is no sooner disappointed
-in his schemes to deprive the people not only of the cares
-of the state, but of all power to redress themselves, than Volumnia
-is made madly to exclaim,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Now the red pestilence strike all trades in Rome,</div>
- <div class='line'>And occupations perish.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>This is but natural: it is but natural for a mother to have more
-regard for her son than for a whole city; but then the city should
-be left to take some care of itself. The care of the state cannot, we
-here see, be safely entrusted to maternal affection, or to the domestic
-charities of high life. The great have private feelings of their own,
-to which the interests of humanity and justice must courtesy. Their
-interests are so far from being the same as those of the community,
-that they are in direct and necessary opposition to them; their power
-is at the expense of <em>our</em> weakness; their riches of <em>our</em> poverty; their
-pride of <em>our</em> degradation; their splendour of <em>our</em> wretchedness; their
-tyranny of <em>our</em> servitude. If they had the superior knowledge
-ascribed to them (which they have not) it would only render them
-so much more formidable; and from Gods would convert them into
-Devils. The whole dramatic moral of <span class='sc'>Coriolanus</span> is that those who
-have little shall have less, and that those who have much shall take
-all that others have left. The people are poor; therefore they
-ought to be starved. They are slaves; therefore they ought to be
-beaten. They work hard; therefore they ought to be treated like
-beasts of burden. They are ignorant; therefore they ought not to
-be allowed to feel that they want food, or clothing, or rest, that they
-are enslaved, oppressed, and miserable. This is the logic of the
-imagination and the passions; which seek to aggrandize what excites
-admiration and to heap contempt on misery, to raise power into
-tyranny, and to make tyranny absolute; to thrust down that which
-is low still lower, and to make wretches desperate: to exalt magistrates
-into kings, kings into gods; to degrade subjects to the rank of
-slaves, and slaves to the condition of brutes. The history of mankind
-is a romance, a mask, a tragedy, constructed upon the principles
-of <em>poetical justice</em>; it is a noble or royal hunt, in which what is sport
-to the few is death to the many, and in which the spectators halloo
-and encourage the strong to set upon the weak, and cry havoc in the
-chase though they do not share in the spoil. We may depend upon
-it that what men delight to read in books, they will put in practice
-in reality.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>One of the most natural traits in this play is the difference of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_217'>217</span>interest taken in the success of Coriolanus by his wife and mother.
-The one is only anxious for his honour; the other is fearful for his
-life.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Volumnia.</em> Methinks I hither hear your husband’s drum:</div>
- <div class='line'>I see him pluck Aufidius down by th’ hair:</div>
- <div class='line'>Methinks I see him stamp thus—and call thus—</div>
- <div class='line'>Come on, ye cowards; ye were got in fear</div>
- <div class='line'>Though you were born in Rome; his bloody brow</div>
- <div class='line'>With his mail’d hand then wiping, forth he goes</div>
- <div class='line'>Like to a harvest man, that’s task’d to mow</div>
- <div class='line'>Or all, or lose his hire.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Virgilia.</em> His bloody brow! Oh Jupiter, no blood.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Volumnia.</em> Away, you fool; it more becomes a man</div>
- <div class='line'>Than gilt his trophy. The breast of Hecuba,</div>
- <div class='line'>When she did suckle Hector, look’d not lovelier</div>
- <div class='line'>Than Hector’s forehead, when it spit forth blood</div>
- <div class='line'>At Grecian swords contending.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>When she hears the trumpets that proclaim her son’s return, she
-says in the true spirit of a Roman matron,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘These are the ushers of Martius: before him</div>
- <div class='line'>He carries noise, and behind him he leaves tears.</div>
- <div class='line'>Death, that dark spirit, in ‘s nervy arm doth lie,</div>
- <div class='line'>Which being advanc’d, declines, and then men die.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Coriolanus himself is a complete character: his love of reputation,
-his contempt of popular opinion, his pride and modesty, are consequences
-of each other. His pride consists in the inflexible sternness
-of his will; his love of glory is a determined desire to bear down all
-opposition, and to extort the admiration both of friends and foes.
-His contempt for popular favour, his unwillingness to hear his own
-praises, spring from the same source. He cannot contradict the
-praises that are bestowed upon him; therefore he is impatient at
-hearing them. He would enforce the good opinion of others by his
-actions, but does not want their acknowledgments in words.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Pray now, no more: my mother,</div>
- <div class='line'>Who has a charter to extol her blood,</div>
- <div class='line'>When she does praise me, grieves me.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>His magnanimity is of the same kind. He admires in an enemy
-that courage which he honours in himself; he places himself on the
-hearth of Aufidius with the same confidence that he would have met
-him in the field, and feels that by putting himself in his power, he
-takes from him all temptation for using it against him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_218'>218</span>In the title-page of <span class='sc'>Coriolanus</span>, it is said at the bottom of the
-<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Dramatis Personæ</span></i>, ‘The whole history exactly followed, and many
-of the principal speeches copied from the life of Coriolanus in Plutarch.’
-It will be interesting to our readers to see how far this is
-the case. Two of the principal scenes, those between Coriolanus and
-Aufidius and between Coriolanus and his mother, are thus given in
-Sir Thomas North’s Translation of Plutarch, dedicated to Queen
-Elizabeth, 1579. The first is as follows:—</p>
-
-<p class='c016'>‘It was even twilight when he entered the city of Antium, and many
-people met him in the streets, but no man knew him. So he went directly
-to Tullus Aufidius’ house, and when he came thither, he got him up
-straight to the chimney-hearth, and sat him down, and spake not a word
-to any man, his face all muffled over. They of the house spying him,
-wondered what he should be, and yet they durst not bid him rise. For
-ill-favouredly muffled and disguised as he was, yet there appeared a certain
-majesty in his countenance and in his silence: whereupon they went to
-Tullus, who was at supper, to tell him of the strange disguising of this
-man. Tullus rose presently from the board, and coming towards him,
-asked him what he was, and wherefore he came. Then Martius unmuffled
-himself, and after he had paused awhile, making no answer, he said unto
-himself, If thou knowest me not yet, Tullus, and seeing me, dost not perhaps
-believe me to be the man I am indeed, I must of necessity discover
-myself to be that I am. “I am Caius Martius, who hath done to thyself
-particularly, and to all the Volces generally, great hurt and mischief, which
-I cannot deny for my surname of Coriolanus that I bear. For I never had
-other benefit nor recompence of the true and painful service I have done,
-and the extreme dangers I have been in, but this only surname: a good
-memory and witness of the malice and displeasure thou shouldest bear me.
-Indeed the name only remaineth with me; for the rest, the envy and
-cruelty of the people of Rome have taken from me, by the sufferance of
-the dastardly nobility and magistrates, who have forsaken me, and let me
-be banished by the people. This extremity hath now driven me to come
-as a poor suitor, to take thy chimney-hearth, not of any hope I have to
-save my life thereby. For if I had feared death, I would not have come
-hither to put myself in hazard; but pricked forward with desire to be
-revenged of them that thus have banished me, which now I do begin, in
-putting my person into the hands of their enemies. Wherefore if thou
-hast any heart to be wrecked of the injuries thy enemies have done thee,
-speed thee now, and let my misery serve thy turn, and so use it as my
-service may be a benefit to the Volces: promising thee, that I will fight
-with better good will for all you, than I did when I was against you, knowing
-that they fight more valiantly who know the force of the enemy, than
-such as have never proved it. And if it be so that thou dare not, and
-that thou art weary to prove fortune any more, then am I also weary to
-live any longer. And it were no wisdom in thee to save the life of him
-who hath been heretofore thy mortal enemy, and whose service now can
-nothing help, nor pleasure thee.” Tullus hearing what he said, was a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_219'>219</span>marvellous glad man, and taking him by the hand, he said unto him:
-“Stand up, O Martius, and be of good cheer, for in proffering thyself
-unto us, thou doest us great honour: and by this means thou mayest hope
-also of greater things at all the Volces’ hands.” So he feasted him for
-that time, and entertained him in the honourablest manner he could, talking
-with him of no other matter at that present: but within few days
-after, they fell to consultation together in what sort they should begin
-their wars.’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The meeting between Coriolanus and his mother is also nearly
-the same as in the play.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'>‘Now was Martius set then in the chair of state, with all the honours
-of a general, and when he had spied the women coming afar off, he marvelled
-what the matter meant: but afterwards knowing his wife which
-came foremost, he determined at the first to persist in his obstinate and
-inflexible rancour. But overcome in the end with natural affection, and
-being altogether altered to see them, his heart would not serve him to tarry
-their coming to his chair, but coming down in haste, he went to meet
-them, and first he kissed his mother, and embraced her a pretty while,
-then his wife and little children. And nature so wrought with him, that
-the tears fell from his eyes, and he could not keep himself from making
-much of them, but yielded to the affection of his blood, as if he had been
-violently carried with the fury of a most swift-running stream. After
-he had thus lovingly received them, and perceiving that his mother
-Volumnia would begin to speak to him, he called the chiefest of the council
-of the Volces to hear what she would say. Then she spake in this sort:
-“If we held our peace, my son, and determined not to speak, the state of
-our poor bodies, and present sight of our raiment, would easily betray to
-thee what life we have led at home, since thy exile and abode abroad;
-but think now with thyself, how much more unfortunate than all the
-women living, we are come hither, considering that the sight which should
-be most pleasant to all others to behold, spiteful fortune had made most
-fearful to us: making myself to see my son, and my daughter here her
-husband, besieging the walls of his native country: so as that which is
-the only comfort to all others in their adversity and misery, to pray unto
-the Gods, and to call to them for aid, is the only thing which plungeth
-us into most deep perplexity. For we cannot, alas, together pray, both
-for victory to our country, and for safety of thy life also: but a world of
-grievous curses, yea more than any mortal enemy can heap upon us, are
-forcibly wrapped up in our prayers. For the bitter sop of most hard choice
-is offered thy wife and children, to forego one of the two: either to lose
-the person of thyself, or the nurse of their native country. For myself, my
-son, I am determined not to tarry till fortune in my lifetime do make an
-end of this war. For if I cannot persuade thee rather to do good unto both
-parties, than to overthrow and destroy the one, preferring love and nature
-before the malice and calamity of wars, thou shalt see, my son, and trust
-unto it, thou shalt no sooner march forward to assault thy country, but
-thy foot shall tread upon thy mother’s womb, that brought thee first into
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span>this world. And I may not defer to see the day, either that my son be
-led prisoner in triumph by his natural countrymen, or that he himself do
-triumph of them, and of his natural country. For if it were so, that my
-request tended to save thy country, in destroying the Volces, I must confess,
-thou wouldest hardly and doubtfully resolve on that. For as to destroy
-thy natural country, it is altogether unmeet and unlawful, so were it not
-just and less honourable to betray those that put their trust in thee. But
-my only demand consisteth, to make a goal delivery of all evils, which
-delivereth equal benefit and safety, both to the one and the other, but
-most honourable for the Volces. For it shall appear, that having victory
-in their hands, they have of special favour granted us singular graces, peace
-and amity, albeit themselves have no less part of both than we. Of which
-good, if so it came to pass, thyself is the only author, and so hast thou the
-only honour. But if it fail, and fall out contrary, thyself alone deservedly
-shalt carry the shameful reproach and burthen of either party. So, though
-the end of war be uncertain, yet this notwithstanding is most certain, that
-if it be thy chance to conquer, this benefit shalt thou reap of thy goodly
-conquest, to be chronicled the plague and destroyer of thy country. And
-if fortune overthrow thee, then the world will say, that through desire to
-revenge thy private injuries, thou hast for ever undone thy good friends,
-who did most lovingly and courteously receive thee.” Martius gave good
-ear unto his mother’s words, without interrupting her speech at all, and
-after she had said what she would, he held his peace a pretty while, and
-answered not a word. Hereupon she began again to speak unto him, and
-said: “My son, why dost thou not answer me? Dost thou think it good
-altogether to give place unto thy choler and desire of revenge, and thinkest
-thou it not honesty for thee to grant thy mother’s request in so weighty
-a cause? Dost thou take it honourable for a nobleman to remember the
-wrongs and injuries done him, and dost not in like case think it an honest
-nobleman’s part to be thankful for the goodness that parents do shew to
-their children, acknowledging the duty and reverence they ought to bear
-unto them? No man living is more bound to shew himself thankful in
-all parts and respects than thyself; who so universally shewest all ingratitude.
-Moreover, my son, thou hast sorely taken of thy country, exacting
-grievous payments upon them, in revenge of the injuries offered thee;
-besides, thou hast not hitherto shewed thy poor mother any courtesy.
-And therefore, it is not only honest but due unto me, that without compulsion
-I should obtain my so just and reasonable request of thee. But
-since by reason I cannot persuade thee to it, to what purpose do I defer my
-last hope.” And with these words, herself, his wife and children, fell
-down upon their knees before him: Martius seeing that, could refrain no
-longer, but went straight and lifted her up, crying out, “Oh mother, what
-have you done to me?” And holding her hard by the hand, “Oh
-mother,” said he, “you have won a happy victory for your country, but
-mortal and unhappy for your son: for I see myself vanquished by you
-alone.” These words being spoken openly, he spake a little apart with his
-mother and wife, and then let them return again to Rome, for so they did
-request him; and so remaining in the camp that night, the next morning
-he dislodged, and marched homeward unto the Volces’ country again.’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span>Shakespear has, in giving a dramatic form to this passage, adhered
-very closely and properly to the text. He did not think it necessary
-to improve upon the truth of nature. Several of the scenes in <cite>Julius
-Cæsar</cite>, particularly Portia’s appeal to the confidence of her husband
-by shewing him the wound she had given herself, and the appearance
-of the ghost of Cæsar to Brutus, are in like manner, taken from the
-history.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>TROILUS AND CRESSIDA</h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>This is one of the most loose and desultory of our author’s plays: it
-rambles on just as it happens, but it overtakes, together with some
-indifferent matter, a prodigious number of fine things in its way.
-Troilus himself is no character: he is merely a common lover: but
-Cressida and her uncle Pandarus are hit off with proverbial truth.
-By the speeches given to the leaders of the Grecian host, Nestor,
-Ulysses, Agamemnon, Achilles, Shakespear seems to have known
-them as well as if he had been a spy sent by the Trojans into the
-enemy’s camp—to say nothing of their affording very lofty examples
-of didactic eloquence. The following is a very stately and spirited
-declamation:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Ulysses.</em> Troy, yet upon her basis, had been down,</div>
- <div class='line'>And the great Hector’s sword had lack’d a master,</div>
- <div class='line'>But for these instances.</div>
- <div class='line'>The specialty of rule hath been neglected.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>The heavens themselves, the planets, and this center,</div>
- <div class='line'>Observe degree, priority, and place,</div>
- <div class='line'>Insisture, course, proportion, season, form,</div>
- <div class='line'>Office, and custom, in all line of order:</div>
- <div class='line'>And therefore is the glorious planet, Sol,</div>
- <div class='line'>In noble eminence, enthron’d and spher’d</div>
- <div class='line'>Amidst the other, whose med’cinable eye</div>
- <div class='line'>Corrects the ill aspects of planets evil,</div>
- <div class='line'>And posts, like the commandment of a king,</div>
- <div class='line'>Sans check, to good and bad. But, when the planets,</div>
- <div class='line'>In evil mixture to disorder wander,</div>
- <div class='line'>What plagues, and what portents? what mutinies?</div>
- <div class='line'>What raging of the sea? shaking of the earth?</div>
- <div class='line'>Commotion in the winds? frights, changes, horrors,</div>
- <div class='line'>Divert and crack, rend and deracinate</div>
- <div class='line'>The unity and married calm of states</div>
- <div class='line'>Quite from their fixture! O, when degree is shaken,</div>
- <div class='line'>(Which is the ladder to all high designs)</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span>The enterprize is sick! How could communities,</div>
- <div class='line'>Degrees in schools, and brotherhoods in cities,</div>
- <div class='line'>Peaceful commerce from dividable shores,</div>
- <div class='line'>The primogenitive and due of birth,</div>
- <div class='line'>Prerogative of age, crowns, sceptres, laurels,</div>
- <div class='line'>(But by degree) stand in authentic place?</div>
- <div class='line'>Take but degree away, untune that string,</div>
- <div class='line'>And hark what discord follows! each thing meets</div>
- <div class='line'>In mere oppugnancy. The bounded waters</div>
- <div class='line'>Would lift their bosoms higher than the shores,</div>
- <div class='line'>And make a sop of all this solid globe:</div>
- <div class='line'>Strength would be the lord of imbecility,</div>
- <div class='line'>And the rude son would strike his father dead:</div>
- <div class='line'>Force would be right; or rather right and wrong</div>
- <div class='line'>(Between whose endless jar Justice resides)</div>
- <div class='line'>Would lose their names, and so would Justice too.</div>
- <div class='line'>Then every thing includes itself in power,</div>
- <div class='line'>Power into will, will into appetite;</div>
- <div class='line'>And appetite (an universal wolf,</div>
- <div class='line'>So doubly seconded with will and power)</div>
- <div class='line'>Must make perforce an universal prey,</div>
- <div class='line'>And last eat up himself. Great Agamemnon,</div>
- <div class='line'>This chaos, when degree is suffocate,</div>
- <div class='line'>Follows the choking:</div>
- <div class='line'>And this neglection of degree it is,</div>
- <div class='line'>That by a pace goes backward, in a purpose</div>
- <div class='line'>It hath to climb. The general’s disdained</div>
- <div class='line'>By him one step below; he, by the next;</div>
- <div class='line'>That next, by him beneath: so every step,</div>
- <div class='line'>Exampled by the first pace that is sick</div>
- <div class='line'>Of his superior, grows to an envious fever</div>
- <div class='line'>Of pale and bloodless emulation;</div>
- <div class='line'>And ’tis this fever that keeps Troy on foot,</div>
- <div class='line'>Not her own sinews. To end a tale of length,</div>
- <div class='line'>Troy in our weakness lives, not in her strength.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>It cannot be said of Shakespear, as was said of some one, that he
-was ‘without o’erflowing full.’ He was full, even to o’erflowing.
-He gave heaped measure, running over. This was his greatest fault.
-He was only in danger ‘of losing distinction in his thoughts’ (to
-borrow his own expression)</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘As doth a battle when they charge on heaps</div>
- <div class='line'>The enemy flying.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>There is another passage, the speech of Ulysses to Achilles, shewing
-him the thankless nature of popularity, which has a still greater depth
-of moral observation and richness of illustration than the former. It
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span>is long, but worth the quoting. The sometimes giving an entire
-argument from the unacted plays of our author may with one class of
-readers have almost the use of restoring a lost passage; and may
-serve to convince another class of critics, that the poet’s genius was
-not confined to the production of stage effect by preternatural means.—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Ulysses.</em> Time hath, my lord, a wallet at his back,</div>
- <div class='line'>Wherein he puts alms for Oblivion;</div>
- <div class='line'>A great-siz’d monster of ingratitudes:</div>
- <div class='line'>Those scraps are good deeds past,</div>
- <div class='line'>Which are devour’d as fast as they are made,</div>
- <div class='line'>Forgot as soon as done. Persev`rance, dear my lord,</div>
- <div class='line'>Keeps Honour bright: to have done, is to hang</div>
- <div class='line'>Quite out of fashion, like a rusty mail</div>
- <div class='line'>In monumental mockery. Take the instant way;</div>
- <div class='line'>For Honour travels in a strait so narrow,</div>
- <div class='line'>Where one but goes abreast; keep then the path,</div>
- <div class='line'>For Emulation hath a thousand sons,</div>
- <div class='line'>That one by one pursue; if you give way,</div>
- <div class='line'>Or hedge aside from the direct forth right,</div>
- <div class='line'>Like to an entered tide, they all rush by,</div>
- <div class='line'>And leave you hindmost;——</div>
- <div class='line'>Or, like a gallant horse fall’n in first rank,</div>
- <div class='line'>O’er-run and trampled on: then what they do in present,</div>
- <div class='line'>Tho’ less than yours in past must o’ertop yours:</div>
- <div class='line'>For Time is like a fashionable host,</div>
- <div class='line'>That slightly shakes his parting guest by th’ hand,</div>
- <div class='line'>And with his arms outstretch’d, as he would fly,</div>
- <div class='line'>Grasps in the comer: the welcome ever smiles,</div>
- <div class='line'>And farewell goes out sighing. O, let not virtue seek</div>
- <div class='line'>Remuneration for the thing it was; for beauty, wit,</div>
- <div class='line'>High birth, vigour of bone, desert in service,</div>
- <div class='line'>Love, friendship, charity, are subjects all</div>
- <div class='line'>To envious and calumniating time:</div>
- <div class='line'>One touch of nature makes the whole world kin.</div>
- <div class='line'>That all with one consent praise new-born gauds,</div>
- <div class='line'>Tho’ they are made and moulded of things past.</div>
- <div class='line'>The present eye praises the present object.</div>
- <div class='line'>Then marvel not, thou great and complete man,</div>
- <div class='line'>That all the Greeks begin to worship Ajax;</div>
- <div class='line'>Since things in motion sooner catch the eye,</div>
- <div class='line'>Than what not stirs. The cry went out on thee,</div>
- <div class='line'>And still it might, and yet it may again,</div>
- <div class='line'>If thou wouldst not entomb thyself alive,</div>
- <div class='line'>And case thy reputation in thy tent.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The throng of images in the above lines is prodigious; and though
-they sometimes jostle against one another, they every where raise and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>carry on the feeling, which is intrinsically true and profound. The
-debates between the Trojan chiefs on the restoring of Helen are full
-of knowledge of human motives and character. Troilus enters well
-into the philosophy of war, when he says in answer to something that
-falls from Hector,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Why there you touch’d the life of our design:</div>
- <div class='line'>Were it not glory that we more affected,</div>
- <div class='line'>Than the performance of our heaving spleens,</div>
- <div class='line'>I would not wish a drop of Trojan blood</div>
- <div class='line'>Spent more in her defence. But, worthy Hector,</div>
- <div class='line'>She is a theme of honour and renown,</div>
- <div class='line'>A spur to valiant and magnanimous deeds.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The character of Hector, in a few slight indications which appear
-of it, is made very amiable. His death is sublime, and shews in a
-striking light the mixture of barbarity and heroism of the age. The
-threats of Achilles are fatal; they carry their own means of execution
-with them.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Come here about me, you my myrmidons,</div>
- <div class='line'>Mark what I say.—Attend me where I wheel:</div>
- <div class='line'>Strike not a stroke, but keep yourselves in breath;</div>
- <div class='line'>And when I have the bloody Hector found,</div>
- <div class='line'>Empale him with your weapons round about,</div>
- <div class='line'>In fellest manner execute your arms.</div>
- <div class='line'>Follow me, sirs, and my proceeding eye.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>He then finds Hector and slays him, as if he had been hunting
-down a wild beast. There is something revolting as well as terrific
-in the ferocious coolness with which he singles out his prey: nor
-does the splendour of the achievement reconcile us to the cruelty of
-the means.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The characters of Cressida and Pandarus are very amusing and
-instructive. The disinterested willingness of Pandarus to serve his
-friend in an affair which lies next his heart is immediately brought
-forward. ‘Go thy way, Troilus, go thy way; had I a sister were
-a grace, or a daughter were a goddess, he should take his choice.
-O admirable man! Paris, Paris is dirt to him, and I warrant Helen,
-to change, would give money to boot.’ This is the language he
-addresses to his niece: nor is she much behindhand in coming into
-the plot. Her head is as light and fluttering as her heart. ‘It is
-the prettiest villain, she fetches her breath so short as a new-ta’en
-sparrow.’ Both characters are originals, and quite different from
-what they are in Chaucer. In Chaucer, Cressida is represented as
-a grave, sober, considerate personage (a widow—he cannot tell her
-age, nor whether she has children or no) who has an alternate eye to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_225'>225</span>her character, her interest, and her pleasure: Shakespear’s Cressida
-is a giddy girl, an unpractised jilt, who falls in love with Troilus, as
-she afterwards deserts him, from mere levity and thoughtlessness of
-temper. She may be wooed and won to any thing and from any thing,
-at a moment’s warning; the other knows very well what she would
-be at, and sticks to it, and is more governed by substantial reasons
-than by caprice or vanity. Pandarus again, in Chaucer’s story, is a
-friendly sort of go-between, tolerably busy, officious, and forward in
-bringing matters to bear: but in Shakespear he has ‘a stamp exclusive
-and professional’: he wears the badge of his trade; he is a regular
-knight of the game. The difference of the manner in which the
-subject is treated arises perhaps less from intention, than from the
-different genius of the two poets. There is no <em>double entendre</em> in the
-characters of Chaucer: they are either quite serious or quite comic.
-In Shakespear the ludicrous and ironical are constantly blended with
-the stately and the impassioned. We see Chaucer’s characters as
-they saw themselves, not as they appeared to others or might have
-appeared to the poet. He is as deeply implicated in the affairs of his
-personages as they could be themselves. He had to go a long journey
-with each of them, and became a kind of necessary confidant. There
-is little relief, or light and shade in his pictures. The conscious
-smile is not seen lurking under the brow of grief or impatience.
-Every thing with him is intense and continuous—a working out of
-what went before.—Shakespear never committed himself to his
-characters. He trifled, laughed, or wept with them as he chose.
-He has no prejudices for or against them; and it seems a matter of
-perfect indifference whether he shall be in jest or earnest. According
-to him ‘the web of our lives is of a mingled yarn, good and ill
-together.’ His genius was dramatic, as Chaucer’s was historical.
-He saw both sides of a question, the different views taken of it
-according to the different interests of the parties concerned, and he
-was at once an actor and spectator in the scene. If any thing, he is
-too various and flexible: too full of transitions, of glancing lights, of
-salient points. If Chaucer followed up his subject too doggedly,
-perhaps Shakespear was too volatile and heedless. The Muse’s
-wing too often lifted him from off his feet. He made infinite
-excursions to the right and the left.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in12'>——‘He hath done</div>
- <div class='line'>Mad and fantastic execution,</div>
- <div class='line'>Engaging and redeeming of himself</div>
- <div class='line'>With such a careless force and forceless care,</div>
- <div class='line'>As if that luck in very spite of cunning</div>
- <div class='line'>Bad him win all.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_226'>226</span>Chaucer attended chiefly to the real and natural, that is, to the
-involuntary and inevitable impressions on the mind in given circumstances;
-Shakespear exhibited also the possible and the fantastical,—not
-only what things are in themselves, but whatever they might seem
-to be, their different reflections, their endless combinations. He lent
-his fancy, wit, invention, to others, and borrowed their feelings in
-return. Chaucer excelled in the force of habitual sentiment; Shakespear
-added to it every variety of passion, every suggestion of thought
-or accident. Chaucer described external objects with the eye of a
-painter, or he might be said to have embodied them with the hand
-of a sculptor, every part is so thoroughly made out, and tangible:—Shakespear’s
-imagination threw over them a lustre</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>—‘Prouder than when blue Iris bends.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Every thing in Chaucer has a downright reality. A simile or a
-sentiment is as if it were given in upon evidence. In Shakespear the
-commonest matter-of-fact has a romantic grace about it; or seems to
-float with the breath of imagination in a freer element. No one
-could have more depth of feeling or observation than Chaucer, but
-he wanted resources of invention to lay open the stores of nature or
-the human heart with the same radiant light that Shakespear has
-done. However fine or profound the thought, we know what is
-coming, whereas the effect of reading Shakespear is ‘like the eye of
-vassalage at unawares encountering majesty.’ Chaucer’s mind was
-consecutive, rather than discursive. He arrived at truth through a
-certain process; Shakespear saw every thing by intuition. Chaucer
-had a great variety of power, but he could do only one thing at once.
-He set himself to work on a particular subject. His ideas were kept
-separate, labelled, ticketed and parcelled out in a set form, in pews
-and compartments by themselves. They did not play into one
-another’s hands. They did not re-act upon one another, as the
-blower’s breath moulds the yielding glass. There is something hard
-and dry in them. What is the most wonderful thing in Shakespear’s
-faculties is their excessive sociability, and how they gossiped and
-compared notes together.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>We must conclude this criticism; and we will do it with a quotation
-or two. One of the most beautiful passages in Chaucer’s tale is
-the description of Cresseide’s first avowal of her love.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘And as the new abashed nightingale,</div>
- <div class='line'>That stinteth first when she beginneth sing,</div>
- <div class='line'>When that she heareth any herde’s tale,</div>
- <div class='line'>Or in the hedges any wight stirring,</div>
- <div class='line'>And, after, sicker doth her voice outring;</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_227'>227</span>Right so Cresseide, when that her dread stent,</div>
- <div class='line'>Opened her heart, and told him her intent.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>See also the two next stanzas, and particularly that divine one
-beginning—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Her armes small, her back both straight and soft,’ etc.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Compare this with the following speech of Troilus to Cressida in
-the play:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘O, that I thought it could be in a woman;</div>
- <div class='line'>And if it can, I will presume in you,</div>
- <div class='line'>To feed for aye her lamp and flame of love,</div>
- <div class='line'>To keep her constancy in plight and youth,</div>
- <div class='line'>Out-living beauties outward, with a mind</div>
- <div class='line'>That doth renew swifter than blood decays.</div>
- <div class='line'>Or, that persuasion could but thus convince me,</div>
- <div class='line'>That my integrity and truth to you</div>
- <div class='line'>Might be affronted with the match and weight</div>
- <div class='line'>Of such a winnow’d purity in love;</div>
- <div class='line'>How were I then uplifted! But alas,</div>
- <div class='line'>I am as true as Truth’s simplicity,</div>
- <div class='line'>And simpler than the infancy of Truth.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>These passages may not seem very characteristic at first sight,
-though we think they are so. We will give two, that cannot be
-mistaken. Patroclus says to Achilles,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in6'>——‘Rouse yourself; and the weak wanton Cupid</div>
- <div class='line'>Shall from your neck unloose his amorous fold,</div>
- <div class='line'>And like a dew-drop from the lion’s mane,</div>
- <div class='line'>Be shook to air.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Troilus, addressing the God of Day on the approach of the
-morning that parts him from Cressida, says with much scorn,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘What! proffer’st thou thy light here for to sell?</div>
- <div class='line'>Go sell it them that <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">smallé selés grave</span>.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>If nobody but Shakespear could have written the former, nobody
-but Chaucer would have thought of the latter.—Chaucer was the
-most literal of poets, as Richardson was of prose-writers.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_228'>228</span>
- <h3 class='c010'>ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>This is a very noble play. Though not in the first class of Shakespear’s
-productions, it stands next to them, and is, we think, the finest
-of his historical plays, that is, of those in which he made poetry the
-organ of history, and assumed a certain tone of character and sentiment,
-in conformity to known facts, instead of trusting to his observations
-of general nature or to the unlimited indulgence of his own
-fancy. What he has added to the actual story, is upon a par with
-it. His genius was, as it were, a match for history as well as nature,
-and could grapple at will with either. The play is full of that
-pervading comprehensive power by which the poet could always make
-himself master of time and circumstances. It presents a fine picture
-of Roman pride and Eastern magnificence: and in the struggle
-between the two, the empire of the world seems suspended, ‘like the
-swan’s down-feather,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘That stands upon the swell at full of tide,</div>
- <div class='line'>And neither way inclines.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The characters breathe, move, and live. Shakespear does not stand
-reasoning on what his characters would do or say, but at once <em>becomes</em>
-them, and speaks and acts for them. He does not present us with
-groups of stage-puppets or poetical machines making set speeches on
-human life, and acting from a calculation of problematical motives,
-but he brings living men and women on the scene, who speak and
-act from real feelings, according to the ebbs and flows of passion,
-without the least tincture of pedantry of logic or rhetoric. Nothing
-is made out by inference and analogy, by climax and antithesis, but
-every thing takes place just as it would have done in reality, according
-to the occasion.—The character of Cleopatra is a master-piece.
-What an extreme contrast it affords to Imogen! One would think
-it almost impossible for the same person to have drawn both. She
-is voluptuous, ostentatious, conscious, boastful of her charms, haughty,
-tyrannical, fickle. The luxurious pomp and gorgeous extravagance
-of the Egyptian queen are displayed in all their force and lustre, as
-well as the irregular grandeur of the soul of Mark Antony. Take
-only the first four lines that they speak as an example of the regal
-style of love-making.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Cleopatra.</em> If it be love indeed, tell me how much?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Antony.</em> There’s beggary in the love that can be reckon’d.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Cleopatra.</em> I’ll set a bourn how far to be belov’d.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Antony.</em> Then must thou needs find out new heav’n, new earth.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_229'>229</span>The rich and poetical description of her person beginning—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘The barge she sat in, like a burnish’d throne,</div>
- <div class='line'>Burnt on the water; the poop was beaten gold,</div>
- <div class='line'>Purple the sails, and so perfumed, that</div>
- <div class='line'>The winds were love-sick’—</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>seems to prepare the way for, and almost to justify the subsequent
-infatuation of Antony when in the sea-fight at Actium, he leaves the
-battle, and ‘like a doating mallard’ follows her flying sails.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Few things in Shakespear (and we know of nothing in any other
-author like them) have more of that local truth of imagination and
-character than the passage in which Cleopatra is represented conjecturing
-what were the employments of Antony in his absence—‘He’s
-speaking now, or murmuring—<em>Where’s my serpent of old Nile?</em>’
-Or again, when she says to Antony, after the defeat at Actium, and
-his summoning up resolution to risk another fight—‘It is my birthday;
-I had thought to have held it poor; but since my lord is
-Antony again, I will be Cleopatra.’ Perhaps the finest burst of all
-is Antony’s rage after his final defeat when he comes in, and surprises
-the messenger of Cæsar kissing her hand—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘To let a fellow that will take rewards,</div>
- <div class='line'>And say God quit you, be familiar with,</div>
- <div class='line'>My play-fellow, your hand; this kingly seal,</div>
- <div class='line'>And plighter of high hearts.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is no wonder that he orders him to be whipped; but his low
-condition is not the true reason: there is another feeling which lies
-deeper, though Antony’s pride would not let him shew it, except by
-his rage; he suspects the fellow to be Cæsar’s proxy.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Cleopatra’s whole character is the triumph of the voluptuous, of
-the love of pleasure and the power of giving it, over every other
-consideration. Octavia is a dull foil to her, and Fulvia a shrew and
-shrill-tongued. What a picture do those lines give of her—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Age cannot wither her, nor custom steal</div>
- <div class='line'>Her infinite variety. Other women cloy</div>
- <div class='line'>The appetites they feed, but she makes hungry</div>
- <div class='line'>Where most she satisfies.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>What a spirit and fire in her conversation with Antony’s messenger
-who brings her the unwelcome news of his marriage with Octavia!
-How all the pride of beauty and of high rank breaks out in her
-promised reward to him—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>——‘There’s gold, and here</div>
- <div class='line'>My bluest veins to kiss!’—</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_230'>230</span>She had great and unpardonable faults, but the grandeur of her
-death almost redeems them. She learns from the depth of despair
-the strength of her affections. She keeps her queen-like state in the
-last disgrace, and her sense of the pleasurable in the last moments of
-her life. She tastes a luxury in death. After applying the asp, she
-says with fondness—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Dost thou not see my baby at my breast,</div>
- <div class='line'>That sucks the nurse asleep?</div>
- <div class='line'>As sweet as balm, as soft as air, as gentle.</div>
- <div class='line'>Oh Antony!’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is worth while to observe that Shakespear has contrasted the
-extreme magnificence of the descriptions in this play with pictures
-of extreme suffering and physical horror, not less striking—partly
-perhaps to place the effeminate character of Mark Antony in a more
-favourable light, and at the same time to preserve a certain balance
-of feeling in the mind. Cæsar says, hearing of his rival’s conduct
-at the court of Cleopatra,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in24'>——‘Antony,</div>
- <div class='line'>Leave thy lascivious wassels. When thou once</div>
- <div class='line'>Wert beaten from Mutina, where thou slew’st</div>
- <div class='line'>Hirtius and Pansa, consuls, at thy heel</div>
- <div class='line'>Did famine follow, whom thou fought’st against,</div>
- <div class='line'>Though daintily brought up, with patience more</div>
- <div class='line'>Than savages could suffer. Thou did’st drink</div>
- <div class='line'>The stale of horses, and the gilded puddle</div>
- <div class='line'>Which beast would cough at. Thy palate then did deign</div>
- <div class='line'>The roughest berry on the rudest hedge,</div>
- <div class='line'>Yea, like the stag, when snow the pasture sheets,</div>
- <div class='line'>The barks of trees thou browsed’st. On the Alps,</div>
- <div class='line'>It is reported, thou didst eat strange flesh,</div>
- <div class='line'>Which some did die to look on: and all this,</div>
- <div class='line'>It wounds thine honour, that I speak it now,</div>
- <div class='line'>Was borne so like a soldier, that thy cheek</div>
- <div class='line'>So much as lank’d not.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The passage after Antony’s defeat by Augustus, where he is made
-to say—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Yes, yes; he at Philippi kept</div>
- <div class='line'>His sword e’en like a dancer; while I struck</div>
- <div class='line'>The lean and wrinkled Cassius, and ’twas I</div>
- <div class='line'>That the mad Brutus ended’—</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>is one of those fine retrospections which show us the winding and
-eventful march of human life. The jealous attention which has been
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_231'>231</span>paid to the unities both of time and place has taken away the principle
-of perspective in the drama, and all the interest which objects derive
-from distance, from contrast, from privation, from change of fortune,
-from long-cherished passion; and contrasts our view of life from a
-strange and romantic dream, long, obscure, and infinite, into a smartly
-contested, three hours’ inaugural disputation on its merits by the
-different candidates for theatrical applause.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The latter scenes of <span class='sc'>Antony and Cleopatra</span> are full of the changes
-of accident and passion. Success and defeat follow one another with
-startling rapidity. Fortune sits upon her wheel more blind and giddy
-than usual. This precarious state and the approaching dissolution of
-his greatness are strikingly displayed in the dialogue of Antony with
-Eros.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Antony.</em> Eros, thou yet behold’st me?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Eros.</em> Ay, noble lord.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Antony.</em> Sometime we see a cloud that’s dragonish,</div>
- <div class='line'>A vapour sometime, like a bear or lion,</div>
- <div class='line'>A towered citadel, a pendant rock,</div>
- <div class='line'>A forked mountain, or blue promontory</div>
- <div class='line'>With trees upon’t, that nod unto the world</div>
- <div class='line'>And mock our eyes with air. Thou hast seen these signs,</div>
- <div class='line'>They are black vesper’s pageants.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Eros.</em> Ay, my lord.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Antony.</em> That which is now a horse, even with a thought</div>
- <div class='line'>The rack dislimns, and makes it indistinct</div>
- <div class='line'>As water is in water.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Eros.</em> It does, my lord.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Antony.</em> My good knave, Eros, now thy captain is</div>
- <div class='line'>Even such a body,’ etc.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>This is, without doubt, one of the finest pieces of poetry in Shakespear.
-The splendour of the imagery, the semblance of reality, the
-lofty range of picturesque objects hanging over the world, their
-evanescent nature, the total uncertainty of what is left behind, are
-just like the mouldering schemes of human greatness. It is finer than
-Cleopatra’s passionate lamentation over his fallen grandeur, because it
-is more dim, unstable, unsubstantial. Antony’s headstrong presumption
-and infatuated determination to yield to Cleopatra’s wishes to
-fight by sea instead of land, meet a merited punishment; and the
-extravagance of his resolutions, increasing with the desperateness of
-his circumstances, is well commented upon by Œnobarbus.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in14'>——‘I see men’s judgments are</div>
- <div class='line'>A parcel of their fortunes, and things outward</div>
- <div class='line'>Do draw the inward quality after them</div>
- <div class='line'>To suffer all alike.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_232'>232</span>The repentance of Œnobarbus after his treachery to his master
-is the most affecting part of the play. He cannot recover from the
-blow which Antony’s generosity gives him, and he dies broken-hearted,
-‘a master-leaver and a fugitive.’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Shakespear’s genius has spread over the whole play a richness like
-the overflowing of the Nile.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>HAMLET</h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>This is that Hamlet the Dane, whom we read of in our youth, and
-whom we may be said almost to remember in our after-years; he
-who made that famous soliloquy on life, who gave the advice to the
-players, who thought ‘this goodly frame, the earth, a steril promontory,
-and this brave o’er-hanging firmament, the air, this majestical
-roof fretted with golden fire, a foul and pestilent congregation of
-vapours’; whom ‘man delighted not, nor woman neither’; he who
-talked with the grave-diggers, and moralised on Yorick’s skull; the
-school-fellow of Rosencraus and Guildenstern at Wittenberg; the
-friend of Horatio; the lover of Ophelia; he that was mad and sent
-to England; the slow avenger of his father’s death; who lived at
-the court of Horwendillus five hundred years before we were born,
-but all whose thoughts we seem to know as well as we do our own,
-because we have read them in Shakespear.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Hamlet is a name; his speeches and sayings but the idle coinage
-of the poet’s brain. What then, are they not real? They are as
-real as our own thoughts. Their reality is in the reader’s mind. It
-is <em>we</em> who are Hamlet. This play has a prophetic truth, which is
-above that of history. Whoever has become thoughtful and melancholy
-through his own mishaps or those of others; whoever has
-borne about with him the clouded brow of reflection, and thought
-himself ‘too much i’ th’ sun’; whoever has seen the golden lamp
-of day dimmed by envious mists rising in his own breast, and could
-find in the world before him only a dull blank with nothing left
-remarkable in it; whoever has known ‘the pangs of despised love,
-the insolence of office, or the spurns which patient merit of the
-unworthy takes’; he who has felt his mind sink within him, and
-sadness cling to his heart like a malady, who has had his hopes
-blighted and his youth staggered by the apparitions of strange things;
-who cannot be well at ease, while he sees evil hovering near him like
-a spectre; whose powers of action have been eaten up by thought,
-he to whom the universe seems infinite, and himself nothing; whose
-bitterness of soul makes him careless of consequences, and who goes to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_233'>233</span>a play as his best resource to shove off, to a second remove, the evils
-of life by a mock representation of them—this is the true Hamlet.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>We have been so used to this tragedy that we hardly know how
-to criticise it any more than we should know how to describe our
-own faces. But we must make such observations as we can. It is
-the one of Shakespear’s plays that we think of the oftenest, because
-it abounds most in striking reflections on human life, and because the
-distresses of Hamlet are transferred, by the turn of his mind, to the
-general account of humanity. Whatever happens to him we apply to
-ourselves, because he applies it so himself as a means of general reasoning.
-He is a great moraliser; and what makes him worth attending
-to is, that he moralises on his own feelings and experience. He is
-not a common-place pedant. If <cite>Lear</cite> is distinguished by the greatest
-depth of passion, <span class='sc'>Hamlet</span> is the most remarkable for the ingenuity,
-originality, and unstudied developement of character. Shakespear had
-more magnanimity than any other poet, and he has shewn more of it
-in this play than in any other. There is no attempt to force an
-interest: every thing is left for time and circumstances to unfold.
-The attention is excited without effort, the incidents succeed each
-other as matters of course, the characters think and speak and act
-just as they might do, if left entirely to themselves. There is no set
-purpose, no straining at a point. The observations are suggested by
-the passing scene—the gusts of passion come and go like sounds of
-music borne on the wind. The whole play is an exact transcript
-of what might be supposed to have taken place at the court of
-Denmark, at the remote period of time fixed upon, before the modern
-refinements in morals and manners were heard of. It would have
-been interesting enough to have been admitted as a by-stander in such
-a scene, at such a time, to have heard and witnessed something of
-what was going on. But here we are more than spectators. We
-have not only ‘the outward pageants and the signs of grief’; but
-‘we have that within which passes shew.’ We read the thoughts of
-the heart, we catch the passions living as they rise. Other dramatic
-writers give us very fine versions and paraphrases of nature; but
-Shakespear, together with his own comments, gives us the original
-text, that we may judge for ourselves. This is a very great advantage.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The character of Hamlet stands quite by itself. It is not a
-character marked by strength of will or even of passion, but by
-refinement of thought and sentiment. Hamlet is as little of the hero
-as a man can well be: but he is a young and princely novice, full of
-high enthusiasm and quick sensibility—the sport of circumstances,
-questioning with fortune and refining on his own feelings, and forced
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_234'>234</span>from the natural bias of his disposition by the strangeness of his
-situation. He seems incapable of deliberate action, and is only
-hurried into extremities on the spur of the occasion, when he has no
-time to reflect, as in the scene where he kills Polonius, and again,
-where he alters the letters which Rosencraus and Guildenstern are
-taking with them to England, purporting his death. At other times,
-when he is most bound to act, he remains puzzled, undecided, and
-sceptical, dallies with his purposes, till the occasion is lost, and finds
-out some pretence to relapse into indolence and thoughtfulness again.
-For this reason he refuses to kill the King when he is at his prayers,
-and by a refinement in malice, which is in truth only an excuse for
-his own want of resolution, defers his revenge to a more fatal opportunity,
-when he shall be engaged in some act ‘that has no relish of
-salvation in it.’</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘He kneels and prays,</div>
- <div class='line'>And now I’ll do’t, and so he goes to heaven,</div>
- <div class='line'>And so am I reveng’d: <em>that would be scann’d</em>.</div>
- <div class='line'>He kill’d my father, and for that,</div>
- <div class='line'>I, his sole son, send him to heaven.</div>
- <div class='line'>Why this is reward, not revenge.</div>
- <div class='line'>Up sword and know thou a more horrid time,</div>
- <div class='line'>When he is drunk, asleep, or in a rage.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>He is the prince of philosophical speculators; and because he
-cannot have his revenge perfect, according to the most refined idea
-his wish can form, he declines it altogether. So he scruples to trust
-the suggestions of the ghost, contrives the scene of the play to have
-surer proof of his uncle’s guilt, and then rests satisfied with this confirmation
-of his suspicions, and the success of his experiment, instead
-of acting upon it. Yet he is sensible of his own weakness, taxes
-himself with it, and tries to reason himself out of it.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘How all occasions do inform against me,</div>
- <div class='line'>And spur my dull revenge! What is a man,</div>
- <div class='line'>If his chief good and market of his time</div>
- <div class='line'>Be but to sleep and feed? A beast; no more.</div>
- <div class='line'>Sure he that made us with such large discourse,</div>
- <div class='line'>Looking before and after, gave us not</div>
- <div class='line'>That capability and god-like reason</div>
- <div class='line'>To rust in us unus’d. Now whether it be</div>
- <div class='line'>Bestial oblivion, or some craven scruple</div>
- <div class='line'>Of thinking too precisely on th’ event,—</div>
- <div class='line'>A thought which quarter’d, hath but one part wisdom,</div>
- <div class='line'>And ever three parts coward;—I do not know</div>
- <div class='line'>Why yet I live to say, this thing’s to do;</div>
- <div class='line'>Sith I have cause, and will, and strength, and means</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_235'>235</span>To do it. Examples gross as earth exhort me:</div>
- <div class='line'>Witness this army of such mass and charge,</div>
- <div class='line'>Led by a delicate and tender prince,</div>
- <div class='line'>Whose spirit with divine ambition puff’d,</div>
- <div class='line'>Makes mouths at the invisible event,</div>
- <div class='line'>Exposing what is mortal and unsure</div>
- <div class='line'>To all that fortune, death, and danger dare,</div>
- <div class='line'>Even for an egg-shell. ’Tis not to be great</div>
- <div class='line'>Never to stir without great argument;</div>
- <div class='line'>But greatly to find quarrel in a straw,</div>
- <div class='line'>When honour’s at the stake. How stand I then,</div>
- <div class='line'>That have a father kill’d, a mother stain’d,</div>
- <div class='line'>Excitements of my reason and my blood,</div>
- <div class='line'>And let all sleep, while to my shame I see</div>
- <div class='line'>The imminent death of twenty thousand men,</div>
- <div class='line'>That for a fantasy and trick of fame,</div>
- <div class='line'>Go to their graves like beds, fight for a plot</div>
- <div class='line'>Whereon the numbers cannot try the cause,</div>
- <div class='line'>Which is not tomb enough and continent</div>
- <div class='line'>To hide the slain?—O, from this time forth,</div>
- <div class='line'>My thoughts be bloody or be nothing worth.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Still he does nothing; and this very speculation on his own infirmity
-only affords him another occasion for indulging it. It is not from
-any want of attachment to his father or of abhorrence of his murder
-that Hamlet is thus dilatory, but it is more to his taste to indulge
-his imagination in reflecting upon the enormity of the crime and
-refining on his schemes of vengeance, than to put them into immediate
-practice. His ruling passion is to think, not to act: and any vague
-pretext that flatters this propensity instantly diverts him from his
-previous purposes.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The moral perfection of this character has been called in question,
-we think, by those who did not understand it. It is more interesting
-than according to rules; amiable, though not faultless. The ethical
-delineations of ‘that noble and liberal casuist’ (as Shakespear has
-been well called) do not exhibit the drab-coloured Quakerism of
-morality. His plays are not copied either from The Whole Duty
-of Man, or from The Academy of Compliments! We confess we
-are a little shocked at the want of refinement in those who are
-shocked at the want of refinement in Hamlet. The neglect of
-punctilious exactness in his behaviour either partakes of the ‘licence
-of the time,’ or else belongs to the very excess of intellectual refinement
-in the character, which makes the common rules of life, as well
-as his own purposes, sit loose upon him. He may be said to be
-amenable only to the tribunal of his own thoughts, and is too much
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_236'>236</span>taken up with the airy world of contemplation to lay as much stress
-as he ought on the practical consequences of things. His habitual
-principles of action are unhinged and out of joint with the time.
-His conduct to Ophelia is quite natural in his circumstances. It is
-that of assumed severity only. It is the effect of disappointed hope,
-of bitter regrets, of affection suspended, not obliterated, by the distractions
-of the scene around him! Amidst the natural and preternatural
-horrors of his situation, he might be excused in delicacy from
-carrying on a regular courtship. When ‘his father’s spirit was in
-arms,’ it was not a time for the son to make love in. He could
-neither marry Ophelia, nor wound her mind by explaining the cause
-of his alienation, which he durst hardly trust himself to think of.
-It would have taken him years to have come to a direct explanation
-on the point. In the harassed state of his mind, he could not have
-done much otherwise than he did. His conduct does not contradict
-what he says when he sees her funeral,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘I loved Ophelia: forty thousand brothers</div>
- <div class='line'>Could not with all their quantity of love</div>
- <div class='line'>Make up my sum.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Nothing can be more affecting or beautiful than the Queen’s
-apostrophe to Ophelia on throwing the flowers into the grave.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in10'>——‘Sweets to the sweet, farewell.</div>
- <div class='line'>I hop’d thou should’st have been my Hamlet’s wife:</div>
- <div class='line'>I thought thy bride-bed to have deck’d, sweet maid,</div>
- <div class='line'>And not have strew’d thy grave.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Shakespear was thoroughly a master of the mixed motives of
-human character, and he here shews us the Queen, who was so
-criminal in some respects, not without sensibility and affection in
-other relations of life.—Ophelia is a character almost too exquisitely
-touching to be dwelt upon. Oh rose of May, oh flower too soon
-faded! Her love, her madness, her death, are described with the
-truest touches of tenderness and pathos. It is a character which
-nobody but Shakespear could have drawn in the way that he has
-done, and to the conception of which there is not even the smallest
-approach, except in some of the old romantic ballads.<a id='r67' /><a href='#f67' class='c012'><sup>[67]</sup></a> Her brother,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_237'>237</span>Laertes, is a character we do not like so well: he is too hot and
-choleric, and somewhat rhodomontade. Polonius is a perfect character
-in its kind; nor is there any foundation for the objections which
-have been made to the consistency of this part. It is said that he
-acts very foolishly and talks very sensibly. There is no inconsistency
-in that. Again, that he talks wisely at one time and foolishly at
-another; that his advice to Laertes is very excellent, and his advice
-to the King and Queen on the subject of Hamlet’s madness very
-ridiculous. But he gives the one as a father, and is sincere in it;
-he gives the other as a mere courtier, a busy-body, and is accordingly
-officious, garrulous, and impertinent. In short, Shakespear has been
-accused of inconsistency in this and other characters, only because
-he has kept up the distinction which there is in nature, between the
-understandings and the moral habits of men, between the absurdity of
-their ideas and the absurdity of their motives. Polonius is not a fool,
-but he makes himself so. His folly, whether in his actions or
-speeches, comes under the head of impropriety of intention.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>We do not like to see our author’s plays acted, and least of all,
-<span class='sc'>Hamlet</span>. There is no play that suffers so much in being transferred
-to the stage. Hamlet himself seems hardly capable of being acted.
-Mr. Kemble unavoidably fails in this character from a want of ease
-and variety. The character of Hamlet is made up of undulating
-lines; it has the yielding flexibility of ‘a wave o’ th’ sea.’ Mr.
-Kemble plays it like a man in armour, with a determined inveteracy
-of purpose, in one undeviating straight line, which is as remote from
-the natural grace and refined susceptibility of the character, as the
-sharp angles and abrupt starts which Mr. Kean introduces into the
-part. Mr. Kean’s Hamlet is as much too splenetic and rash as
-Mr. Kemble’s is too deliberate and formal. His manner is too strong
-and pointed. He throws a severity, approaching to virulence, into
-the common observations and answers. There is nothing of this in
-Hamlet. He is, as it were, wrapped up in his reflections, and only
-<em>thinks aloud</em>. There should therefore be no attempt to impress what
-he says upon others by a studied exaggeration of emphasis or manner;
-no <em>talking at</em> his hearers. There should be as much of the gentleman
-and scholar as possible infused into the part, and as little of the actor.
-A pensive air of sadness should sit reluctantly upon his brow, but no
-appearance of fixed and sullen gloom. He is full of weakness and
-melancholy, but there is no harshness in his nature. He is the most
-amiable of misanthropes.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_238'>238</span>
- <h3 class='c010'>THE TEMPEST</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>There can be little doubt that Shakespear was the most universal
-genius that ever lived. ‘Either for tragedy, comedy, history, pastoral,
-pastoral-comical, historical-pastoral, scene individable or poem unlimited,
-he is the only man. Seneca cannot be too heavy, nor
-Plautus too light for him.’ He has not only the same absolute
-command over our laughter and our tears, all the resources of passion,
-of wit, of thought, of observation, but he has the most unbounded
-range of fanciful invention, whether terrible or playful, the same
-insight into the world of imagination that he has into the world of
-reality; and over all there presides the same truth of character and
-nature, and the same spirit of humanity. His ideal beings are as true
-and natural as his real characters; that is, as consistent with themselves,
-or if we suppose such beings to exist at all, they could not act,
-speak, or feel otherwise than as he makes them. He has invented
-for them a language, manners, and sentiments of their own, from the
-tremendous imprecations of the Witches in <cite>Macbeth</cite>, when they do
-‘a deed without a name,’ to the sylph-like expressions of Ariel, who
-‘does his spiriting gently’; the mischievous tricks and gossipping of
-Robin Goodfellow, or the uncouth gabbling and emphatic gesticulations
-of Caliban in this play.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The <span class='sc'>Tempest</span> is one of the most original and perfect of Shakespear’s
-productions, and he has shewn in it all the variety of his powers. It
-is full of grace and grandeur. The human and imaginary characters,
-the dramatic and the grotesque, are blended together with the greatest
-art, and without any appearance of it. Though he has here given
-‘to airy nothing a local habitation and a name,’ yet that part which is
-only the fantastic creation of his mind, has the same palpable texture,
-and coheres ‘semblably’ with the rest. As the preternatural part
-has the air of reality, and almost haunts the imagination with a sense
-of truth, the real characters and events partake of the wildness of a
-dream. The stately magician, Prospero, driven from his dukedom,
-but around whom (so potent is his art) airy spirits throng numberless
-to do his bidding; his daughter Miranda (‘worthy of that name’)
-to whom all the power of his art points, and who seems the goddess
-of the isle; the princely Ferdinand, cast by fate upon the haven of
-his happiness in this idol of his love; the delicate Ariel; the savage
-Caliban, half brute, half demon; the drunken ship’s crew—are all
-connected parts of the story, and can hardly be spared from the place
-they fill. Even the local scenery is of a piece and character with the
-subject. Prospero’s enchanted island seems to have risen up out of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_239'>239</span>the sea; the airy music, the tempest-tost vessel, the turbulent waves,
-all have the effect of the landscape background of some fine picture.
-Shakespear’s pencil is (to use an allusion of his own) ‘like the dyer’s
-hand, subdued to what it works in.’ Every thing in him, though it
-partakes of ‘the liberty of wit,’ is also subjected to ‘the law’ of the
-understanding. For instance, even the drunken sailors, who are made
-reeling-ripe, share, in the disorder of their minds and bodies, in the
-tumult of the elements, and seem on shore to be as much at the mercy
-of chance as they were before at the mercy of the winds and waves.
-These fellows with their sea-wit are the least to our taste of any part
-of the play: but they are as like drunken sailors as they can be, and
-are an indirect foil to Caliban, whose figure acquires a classical dignity
-in the comparison.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The character of Caliban is generally thought (and justly so) to be
-one of the author’s master-pieces. It is not indeed pleasant to see
-this character on the stage any more than it is to see the god Pan
-personated there. But in itself it is one of the wildest and most
-abstracted of all Shakespear’s characters, whose deformity whether of
-body or mind is redeemed by the power and truth of the imagination
-displayed in it. It is the essence of grossness, but there is not a
-particle of vulgarity in it. Shakespear has described the brutal mind
-of Caliban in contact with the pure and original forms of nature; the
-character grows out of the soil where it is rooted, uncontrouled,
-uncouth and wild, uncramped by any of the meannesses of custom.
-It is ‘of the earth, earthy.’ It seems almost to have been dug out
-of the ground, with a soul instinctively superadded to it answering to
-its wants and origin. Vulgarity is not natural coarseness, but conventional
-coarseness, learnt from others, contrary to, or without an
-entire conformity of natural power and disposition; as fashion is the
-common-place affectation of what is elegant and refined without any
-feeling of the essence of it. Schlegel, the admirable German critic
-on Shakespear, observes that Caliban is a poetical character, and
-‘always speaks in blank verse.’ He first comes in thus:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Caliban.</em> As wicked dew as e’er my mother brush’d</div>
- <div class='line'>With raven’s feather from unwholesome fen,</div>
- <div class='line'>Drop on you both: a south-west blow on ye,</div>
- <div class='line'>And blister you all o’er!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Prospero.</em> For this, be sure, to-night thou shalt have cramps,</div>
- <div class='line'>Side-stitches that shall pen thy breath up; urchins</div>
- <div class='line'>Shall for that vast of night that they may work,</div>
- <div class='line'>All exercise on thee: thou shalt be pinched</div>
- <div class='line'>As thick as honey-combs, each pinch more stinging</div>
- <div class='line'>Than bees that made them.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_240'>240</span><em>Caliban.</em> I must eat my dinner.</div>
- <div class='line'>This island’s mine by Sycorax my mother,</div>
- <div class='line'>Which thou tak’st from me. When thou camest first,</div>
- <div class='line'>Thou stroak’dst me, and mad’st much of me; would’st give me</div>
- <div class='line'>Water with berries in ‘t; and teach me how</div>
- <div class='line'>To name the bigger light and how the less</div>
- <div class='line'>That burn by day and night; and then I lov’d thee,</div>
- <div class='line'>And shew’d thee all the qualities o’ th’ isle,</div>
- <div class='line'>The fresh springs, brine-pits, barren place and fertile:</div>
- <div class='line'>Curs’d be I that I did so! All the charms</div>
- <div class='line'>Of Sycorax, toads, beetles, bats, light on you!</div>
- <div class='line'>For I am all the subjects that you have,</div>
- <div class='line'>Who first was mine own king; and here you sty me</div>
- <div class='line'>In this hard rock, whiles you do keep from me</div>
- <div class='line'>The rest o’ th’ island.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>And again, he promises Trinculo his services thus, if he will free
-him from his drudgery.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘I’ll shew thee the best springs; I’ll pluck thee berries,</div>
- <div class='line'>I’ll fish for thee, and get thee wood enough.</div>
- <div class='line'>I pr’ythee let me bring thee where crabs grow,</div>
- <div class='line'>And I with my long nails will dig thee pig-nuts:</div>
- <div class='line'>Shew thee a jay’s nest, and instruct thee how</div>
- <div class='line'>To snare the nimble marmozet: I’ll bring thee</div>
- <div class='line'>To clust’ring filberds; and sometimes I’ll get thee</div>
- <div class='line'>Young scamels from the rock.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>In conducting Stephano and Trinculo to Prospero’s cell, Caliban
-shews the superiority of natural capacity over greater knowledge and
-greater folly; and in a former scene, when Ariel frightens them with
-his music, Caliban to encourage them accounts for it in the eloquent
-poetry of the senses.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>—‘Be not afraid, the isle is full of noises,</div>
- <div class='line'>Sounds, and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.</div>
- <div class='line'>Sometimes a thousand twanging instruments</div>
- <div class='line'>Will hum about mine ears, and sometimes voices,</div>
- <div class='line'>That if I then had waked after long sleep,</div>
- <div class='line'>Would make me sleep again; and then in dreaming,</div>
- <div class='line'>The clouds methought would open, and shew riches</div>
- <div class='line'>Ready to drop upon me; when I wak’d,</div>
- <div class='line'>I cried to dream again.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>This is not more beautiful than it is true. The poet here shews
-us the savage with the simplicity of a child, and makes the strange
-monster amiable. Shakespear had to paint the human animal rude
-and without choice in its pleasures, but not without the sense of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_241'>241</span>pleasure or some germ of the affections. Master Barnardine in
-<cite>Measure for Measure</cite>, the savage of civilized life, is an admirable
-philosophical counterpart to Caliban.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Shakespear has, as it were by design, drawn off from Caliban the
-elements of whatever is ethereal and refined, to compound them in
-the unearthly mould of Ariel. Nothing was ever more finely conceived
-than this contrast between the material and the spiritual,
-the gross and delicate. Ariel is imaginary power, the swiftness of
-thought personified. When told to make good speed by Prospero,
-he says, ‘I drink the air before me.’ This is something like Puck’s
-boast on a similar occasion, ‘I’ll put a girdle round about the earth
-in forty minutes.’ But Ariel differs from Puck in having a fellow
-feeling in the interests of those he is employed about. How exquisite
-is the following dialogue between him and Prospero!</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Ariel.</em> Your charm so strongly works ‘em,</div>
- <div class='line'>That if you now beheld them, your affections</div>
- <div class='line'>Would become tender.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Prospero.</em> Dost thou think so, spirit?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Ariel.</em> Mine would, sir, were I human.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Prospero.</em> And mine shall.</div>
- <div class='line'>Hast thou, which art but air, a touch, a feeling</div>
- <div class='line'>Of their afflictions, and shall not myself,</div>
- <div class='line'>One of their kind, that relish all as sharply,</div>
- <div class='line'>Passion’d as they, be kindlier moved than thou art?’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>It has been observed that there is a peculiar charm in the songs
-introduced in Shakespear, which, without conveying any distinct
-images, seem to recall all the feelings connected with them, like
-snatches of half-forgotten music heard indistinctly and at intervals.
-There is this effect produced by Ariel’s songs, which (as we are
-told) seem to sound in the air, and as if the person playing them
-were invisible. We shall give one instance out of many of this
-general power.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>‘<em>Enter</em> <span class='sc'>Ferdinand</span>; <em>and</em> <span class='sc'>Ariel</span> <em>invisible, playing and singing</em>.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in22'>ARIEL’S SONG.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in12'>Come unto these yellow sands,</div>
- <div class='line in12'>And then take hands;</div>
- <div class='line in12'>Curt’sied when you have, and kiss’d,</div>
- <div class='line in12'>(The wild waves whist;)</div>
- <div class='line in12'>Foot it featly here and there;</div>
- <div class='line in12'>And sweet sprites the burden bear.</div>
- <div class='line in46'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>[<em>Burden dispersedly.</em><span class='hidev'>|</span></span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_242'>242</span>Hark, hark! bowgh-wowgh: the watch-dogs bark,</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Bowgh-wowgh.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Ariel.</em> Hark, hark! I hear</div>
- <div class='line'>The strain of strutting chanticleer</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Cry cock-a-doodle-doo.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Ferdinand.</em> Where should this music be? i’ the air or the earth?</div>
- <div class='line'>It sounds no more: and sure it waits upon</div>
- <div class='line'>Some god o’ th’ island. Sitting on a bank</div>
- <div class='line'>Weeping against the king my father’s wreck,</div>
- <div class='line'>This music crept by me upon the waters,</div>
- <div class='line'>Allaying both their fury and my passion</div>
- <div class='line'>With its sweet air; thence I have follow’d it,</div>
- <div class='line'>Or it hath drawn me rather:—but ’tis gone.—</div>
- <div class='line'>No, it begins again.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in22'>ARIEL’S SONG.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in12'>Full fathom five thy father lies,</div>
- <div class='line in16'>Of his bones are coral made:</div>
- <div class='line in12'>Those are pearls that were his eyes,</div>
- <div class='line in16'>Nothing of him that doth fade,</div>
- <div class='line in12'>But doth suffer a sea change,</div>
- <div class='line in12'>Into something rich and strange.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>Sea-nymphs hourly ring his knell—</div>
- <div class='line in12'>Hark! now I hear them, ding-dong bell.</div>
- <div class='line in48'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>[<em>Burden ding-dong.</em><span class='hidev'>|</span></span></div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Ferdinand.</em> The ditty does remember my drown’d father.</div>
- <div class='line'>This is no mortal business, nor no sound</div>
- <div class='line'>That the earth owes: I hear it now above me.’—</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The courtship between Ferdinand and Miranda is one of the chief
-beauties of this play. It is the very purity of love. The pretended
-interference of Prospero with it heightens its interest, and is in
-character with the magician, whose sense of preternatural power
-makes him arbitrary, tetchy, and impatient of opposition.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The <span class='sc'>Tempest</span> is a finer play than the <cite>Midsummer Night’s Dream</cite>,
-which has sometimes been compared with it; but it is not so fine a
-poem. There are a greater number of beautiful passages in the latter.
-Two of the most striking in the <span class='sc'>Tempest</span> are spoken by Prospero.
-The one is that admirable one when the vision which he has conjured
-up disappears, beginning ‘The cloud-capp’d towers, the gorgeous
-palaces,’ etc., which has been so often quoted, that every school-boy
-knows it by heart; the other is that which Prospero makes in
-abjuring his art.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Ye elves of hills, brooks, standing lakes, and groves,</div>
- <div class='line'>And ye that on the sands with printless foot</div>
- <div class='line'>Do chase the ebbing Neptune, and do fly him</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_243'>243</span>When he comes back; you demi-puppets, that</div>
- <div class='line'>By moon-shine do the green sour ringlets make,</div>
- <div class='line'>Whereof the ewe not bites; and you whose pastime</div>
- <div class='line'>Is to make midnight mushrooms, that rejoice</div>
- <div class='line'>To hear the solemn curfew, by whose aid</div>
- <div class='line'>(Weak masters tho’ ye be) I have be-dimm’d</div>
- <div class='line'>The noon-tide sun, call’d forth the mutinous winds,</div>
- <div class='line'>And ‘twixt the green sea and the azur’d vault</div>
- <div class='line'>Set roaring war; to the dread rattling thunder</div>
- <div class='line'>Have I giv’n fire, and rifted Jove’s stout oak</div>
- <div class='line'>With his own bolt; the strong-bas’d promontory</div>
- <div class='line'>Have I made shake, and by the spurs pluck’d up</div>
- <div class='line'>The pine and cedar: graves at my command</div>
- <div class='line'>Have wak’d their sleepers; oped, and let ‘em forth</div>
- <div class='line'>By my so potent art. But this rough magic</div>
- <div class='line'>I here abjure; and when I have requir’d</div>
- <div class='line'>Some heavenly music, which even now I do,</div>
- <div class='line'>(To work mine end upon their senses that</div>
- <div class='line'>This airy charm is for) I’ll break my staff,</div>
- <div class='line'>Bury it certain fadoms in the earth,</div>
- <div class='line'>And deeper than did ever plummet sound,</div>
- <div class='line'>I’ll drown my book.’—</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>We must not forget to mention among other things in this play,
-that Shakespear has anticipated nearly all the arguments on the
-Utopian schemes of modern philosophy.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Gonzalo.</em> Had I the plantation of this isle, my lord—</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Antonio.</em> He’d sow it with nettle-seed.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Sebastian.</em> Or docks or mallows.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Gonzalo.</em> And were the king on’t, what would I do?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Sebastian.</em> ‘Scape being drunk, for want of wine.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Gonzalo.</em> I’ the commonwealth I would by contraries</div>
- <div class='line'>Execute all things: for no kind of traffic</div>
- <div class='line'>Would I admit; no name of magistrate;</div>
- <div class='line'>Letters should not be known; wealth, poverty,</div>
- <div class='line'>And use of service, none; contract, succession,</div>
- <div class='line'>Bourn, bound of land, tilth, vineyard, none;</div>
- <div class='line'>No use of metal, corn, or wine, or oil;</div>
- <div class='line'>No occupation, all men idle, all,</div>
- <div class='line'>And women too; but innocent and pure:</div>
- <div class='line'>No sovereignty.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Sebastian.</em> And yet he would be king on ‘t.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Antonio.</em> The latter end of his commonwealth forgets the</div>
- <div class='line'>beginning.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Gonzalo.</em> All things in common nature should produce</div>
- <div class='line'>Without sweat or endeavour. Treason, felony,</div>
- <div class='line'>Sword, pike, knife, gun, or need of any engine</div>
- <div class='line'>Would I not have; but nature should bring forth,</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_244'>244</span>Of its own kind, all foizon, all abundance</div>
- <div class='line'>To feed my innocent people!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Sebastian.</em> No marrying ‘mong his subjects?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Antonio.</em> None, man; all idle; whores and knaves.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Gonzalo.</em> I would with such perfection govern, sir,</div>
- <div class='line'>To excel the golden age.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Sebastian.</em> Save his majesty!’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>THE MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM</h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>Bottom the Weaver is a character that has not had justice done
-him. He is the most romantic of mechanics. And what a list of
-companions he has—Quince the Carpenter, Snug the Joiner, Flute
-the Bellows-mender, Snout the Tinker, Starveling the Tailor; and
-then again, what a group of fairy attendants, Puck, Peaseblossom,
-Cobweb, Moth, and Mustard-seed! It has been observed that
-Shakespear’s characters are constructed upon deep physiological
-principles; and there is something in this play which looks very like
-it. Bottom the Weaver, who takes the lead of</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘This crew of patches, rude mechanicals,</div>
- <div class='line'>That work for bread upon Athenian stalls,’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>follows a sedentary trade, and he is accordingly represented as conceited,
-serious, and fantastical. He is ready to undertake any thing
-and every thing, as if it was as much a matter of course as the motion
-of his loom and shuttle. He is for playing the tyrant, the lover, the
-lady, the lion. ‘He will roar that it shall do any man’s heart good
-to hear him’; and this being objected to as improper, he still has a
-resource in his good opinion of himself, and ‘will roar you an ‘twere
-any nightingale.’ Snug the Joiner is the moral man of the piece,
-who proceeds by measurement and discretion in all things. You see
-him with his rule and compasses in his hand. ‘Have you the lion’s
-part written? Pray you, if it be, give it me, for I am slow of study.’
-‘You may do it extempore,’ says Quince, ‘for it is nothing but
-roaring.’ Starveling the Tailor keeps the peace, and objects to the
-lion and the drawn sword. ‘I believe we must leave the killing out
-when all’s done.’ Starveling, however, does not start the objections
-himself, but seconds them when made by others, as if he had not
-spirit to express his fears without encouragement. It is too much
-to suppose all this intentional: but it very luckily falls out so. Nature
-includes all that is implied in the most subtle analytical distinctions;
-and the same distinctions will be found in Shakespear. Bottom, who
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_245'>245</span>is not only chief actor, but stage-manager for the occasion, has a
-device to obviate the danger of frightening the ladies: ‘Write me a
-prologue, and let the prologue seem to say, we will do no harm with
-our swords, and that Pyramus is not killed indeed; and for better
-assurance, tell them that I, Pyramus, am not Pyramus, but Bottom
-the Weaver: this will put them out of fear.’ Bottom seems to have
-understood the subject of dramatic illusion at least as well as any
-modern essayist. If our holiday mechanic rules the roast among his
-fellows, he is no less at home in his new character of an ass, ‘with
-amiable cheeks, and fair large ears.’ He instinctively acquires a
-most learned taste, and grows fastidious in the choice of dried peas
-and bottled hay. He is quite familiar with his new attendants, and
-assigns them their parts with all due gravity. ‘Monsieur Cobweb,
-good Monsieur, get your weapon in your hand, and kill me a red-hipt
-humble bee on the top of a thistle, and, good Monsieur, bring
-me the honey-bag.’ What an exact knowledge is here shewn of
-natural history!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Puck, or Robin Goodfellow, is the leader of the fairy band. He
-is the Ariel of the <span class='sc'>Midsummer Night’s Dream</span>; and yet as unlike as
-can be to the Ariel in <cite>The Tempest</cite>. No other poet could have made
-two such different characters out of the same fanciful materials and
-situations. Ariel is a minister of retribution, who is touched with
-the sense of pity at the woes he inflicts. Puck is a mad-cap sprite,
-full of wantonness and mischief, who laughs at those whom he misleads—‘Lord,
-what fools these mortals be!’ Ariel cleaves the air,
-and executes his mission with the zeal of a winged messenger; Puck
-is borne along on his fairy errand like the light and glittering gossamer
-before the breeze. He is, indeed, a most Epicurean little gentleman,
-dealing in quaint devices, and faring in dainty delights. Prospero
-and his world of spirits are a set of moralists: but with Oberon and his
-fairies we are launched at once into the empire of the butterflies.
-How beautifully is this race of beings contrasted with the men and
-women actors in the scene, by a single epithet which Titania gives to
-the latter, ‘the human mortals!’ It is astonishing that Shakespear
-should be considered, not only by foreigners, but by many of our
-own critics, as a gloomy and heavy writer, who painted nothing but
-‘gorgons and hydras, and chimeras dire.’ His subtlety exceeds that
-of all other dramatic writers, insomuch that a celebrated person of
-the present day said that he regarded him rather as a metaphysician
-than a poet. His delicacy and sportive gaiety are infinite. In the
-<span class='sc'>Midsummer Night’s Dream</span> alone, we should imagine, there is more
-sweetness and beauty of description than in the whole range of French
-poetry put together. What we mean is this, that we will produce
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_246'>246</span>out of that single play ten passages, to which we do not think any
-ten passages in the works of the French poets can be opposed, displaying
-equal fancy and imagery. Shall we mention the remonstrance
-of Helena to Hermia, or Titania’s description of her fairy train, or
-her disputes with Oberon about the Indian boy, or Puck’s account of
-himself and his employments, or the Fairy Queen’s exhortation to
-the elves to pay due attendance upon her favourite, Bottom; or
-Hippolita’s description of a chace, or Theseus’s answer? The two
-last are as heroical and spirited as the others are full of luscious
-tenderness. The reading of this play is like wandering in a grove by
-moonlight: the descriptions breathe a sweetness like odours thrown
-from beds of flowers.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Titania’s exhortation to the fairies to wait upon Bottom, which is
-remarkable for a certain cloying sweetness in the repetition of the
-rhymes, is as follows:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Be kind and courteous to this gentleman.</div>
- <div class='line'>Hop in his walks, and gambol in his eyes,</div>
- <div class='line'>Feed him with apricocks and dewberries,</div>
- <div class='line'>With purple grapes, green figs and mulberries;</div>
- <div class='line'>The honey-bags steal from the humble bees,</div>
- <div class='line'>And for night tapers crop their waxen thighs,</div>
- <div class='line'>And light them at the fiery glow-worm’s eyes,</div>
- <div class='line'>To have my love to bed, and to arise:</div>
- <div class='line'>And pluck the wings from painted butterflies,</div>
- <div class='line'>To fan the moon-beams from his sleeping eyes;</div>
- <div class='line'>Nod to him, elves, and do him courtesies.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The sounds of the lute and of the trumpet are not more distinct
-than the poetry of the foregoing passage, and of the conversation
-between Theseus and Hippolita.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Theseus.</em> Go, one of you, find out the forester,</div>
- <div class='line'>For now our observation is perform’d;</div>
- <div class='line'>And since we have the vaward of the day,</div>
- <div class='line'>My love shall hear the music of my hounds.</div>
- <div class='line'>Uncouple in the western valley, go,</div>
- <div class='line'>Dispatch, I say, and find the forester.</div>
- <div class='line'>We will, fair Queen, up to the mountain’s top,</div>
- <div class='line'>And mark the musical confusion</div>
- <div class='line'>Of hounds and echo in conjunction.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Hippolita.</em> I was with Hercules and Cadmus once,</div>
- <div class='line'>When in a wood of Crete they bay’d the bear</div>
- <div class='line'>With hounds of Sparta; never did I hear</div>
- <div class='line'>Such gallant chiding. For besides the groves,</div>
- <div class='line'>The skies, the fountains, every region near</div>
- <div class='line'>Seem’d all one mutual cry. I never heard</div>
- <div class='line'>So musical a discord, such sweet thunder.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_247'>247</span><em>Theseus.</em> My hounds are bred out of the Spartan kind,</div>
- <div class='line'>So flew’d, so sanded, and their heads are hung</div>
- <div class='line'>With ears that sweep away the morning dew;</div>
- <div class='line'>Crook-knee’d and dew-lap’d, like Thessalian bulls.</div>
- <div class='line'>Slow in pursuit, but matched in mouth like bells,</div>
- <div class='line'>Each under each. A cry more tuneable</div>
- <div class='line'>Was never halloo’d to, nor cheer’d with horn,</div>
- <div class='line'>In Crete, in Sparta, nor in Thessaly:</div>
- <div class='line'>Judge when you hear.’—</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Even Titian never made a hunting-piece of a <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">gusto</span></i> so fresh and lusty,
-and so near the first ages of the world as this.—</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It had been suggested to us, that the <span class='sc'>Midsummer Night’s Dream</span>
-would do admirably to get up as a Christmas after-piece; and our
-prompter proposed that Mr. Kean should play the part of Bottom, as
-worthy of his great talents. He might, in the discharge of his duty,
-offer to play the lady like any of our actresses that he pleased, the
-lover or the tyrant like any of our actors that he pleased, and the lion
-like ‘the most fearful wild-fowl living.’ The carpenter, the tailor,
-and joiner, it was thought, would hit the galleries. The young
-ladies in love would interest the side-boxes; and Robin Goodfellow
-and his companions excite a lively fellow-feeling in the children from
-school. There would be two courts, an empire within an empire, the
-Athenian and the Fairy King and Queen, with their attendants, and
-with all their finery. What an opportunity for processions, for the
-sound of trumpets and glittering of spears! What a fluttering of
-urchins’ painted wings; what a delightful profusion of gauze clouds
-and airy spirits floating on them!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Alas the experiment has been tried, and has failed; not through
-the fault of Mr. Kean, who did not play the part of Bottom, nor of
-Mr. Liston, who did, and who played it well, but from the nature of
-things. The <span class='sc'>Midsummer Night’s Dream</span>, when acted, is converted
-from a delightful fiction into a dull pantomime. All that is finest in
-the play is lost in the representation. The spectacle was grand: but
-the spirit was evaporated, the genius was fled.—Poetry and the stage
-do not agree well together. The attempt to reconcile them in this
-instance fails not only of effect, but of decorum. The <em>ideal</em> can have
-no place upon the stage, which is a picture without perspective;
-everything there is in the foreground. That which was merely an
-airy shape, a dream, a passing thought, immediately becomes an unmanageable
-reality. Where all is left to the imagination (as is the
-case in reading) every circumstance, near or remote, has an equal
-chance of being kept in mind, and tells according to the mixed
-impression of all that has been suggested. But the imagination cannot
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_248'>248</span>sufficiently qualify the actual impressions of the senses. Any offence
-given to the eye is not to be got rid of by explanation. Thus
-Bottom’s head in the play is a fantastic illusion, produced by magic
-spells: on the stage it is an ass’s head, and nothing more; certainly
-a very strange costume for a gentleman to appear in. Fancy cannot
-be embodied any more than a simile can be painted; and it is as idle
-to attempt it as to personate <em>Wall</em> or <em>Moonshine</em>. Fairies are not
-incredible, but fairies six feet high are so. Monsters are not shocking,
-if they are seen at a proper distance. When ghosts appear at
-mid-day, when apparitions stalk along Cheapside, then may the
-<span class='sc'>Midsummer Night’s Dream</span> be represented without injury at Covent
-Garden or at Drury Lane. The boards of a theatre and the regions
-of fancy are not the same thing.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>ROMEO AND JULIET</h3>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='sc'>Romeo and Juliet</span> is the only tragedy which Shakespear has written
-entirely on a love-story. It is supposed to have been his first play, and
-it deserves to stand in that proud rank. There is the buoyant spirit
-of youth in every line, in the rapturous intoxication of hope, and in the
-bitterness of despair. It has been said of <span class='sc'>Romeo and Juliet</span> by a great
-critic, that ‘whatever is most intoxicating in the odour of a southern
-spring, languishing in the song of the nightingale, or voluptuous in the
-first opening of the rose, is to be found in this poem.’ The description
-is true; and yet it does not answer to our idea of the play. For
-if it has the sweetness of the rose, it has its freshness too; if it has
-the languor of the nightingale’s song, it has also its giddy transport;
-if it has the softness of a southern spring, it is as glowing and as
-bright. There is nothing of a sickly and sentimental cast. Romeo
-and Juliet are in love, but they are not love-sick. Every thing speaks
-the very soul of pleasure, the high and healthy pulse of the passions:
-the heart beats, the blood circulates and mantles throughout. Their
-courtship is not an insipid interchange of sentiments lip-deep, learnt
-at second-hand from poems and plays,—made up of beauties of the
-most shadowy kind, of ‘fancies wan that hang the pensive head,’ of
-evanescent smiles, and sighs that breathe not, of delicacy that shrinks
-from the touch, and feebleness that scarce supports itself, an elaborate
-vacuity of thought, and an artificial dearth of sense, spirit, truth, and
-nature! It is the reverse of all this. It is Shakespear all over, and
-Shakespear when he was young.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_249'>249</span>We have heard it objected to <span class='sc'>Romeo and Juliet</span>, that it is founded
-on an idle passion between a boy and a girl, who have scarcely seen
-and can have but little sympathy or rational esteem for one another,
-who have had no experience of the good or ills of life, and whose
-raptures or despair must be therefore equally groundless and fantastical.
-Whoever objects to the youth of the parties in this play as ‘too unripe
-and crude’ to pluck the sweets of love, and wishes to see a first-love
-carried on into a good old age, and the passions taken at the rebound,
-when their force is spent, may find all this done in the <em>Stranger</em> and
-in other German plays, where they do things by contraries, and transpose
-nature to inspire sentiment and create philosophy. Shakespear
-proceeded in a more strait-forward, and, we think, effectual way.
-He did not endeavour to extract beauty from wrinkles, or the wild
-throb of passion from the last expiring sigh of indifference. He did
-not ‘gather grapes of thorns nor figs of thistles.’ It was not his way.
-But he has given a picture of human life, such as it is in the order of
-nature. He has founded the passion of the two lovers not on the
-pleasures they had experienced, but on all the pleasures they had <em>not</em>
-experienced. All that was to come of life was theirs. At that
-untried source of promised happiness they slaked their thirst, and the
-first eager draught made them drunk with love and joy. They were
-in full possession of their senses and their affections. Their hopes
-were of air, their desires of fire. Youth is the season of love, because
-the heart is then first melted in tenderness from the touch of novelty,
-and kindled to rapture, for it knows no end of its enjoyments or its
-wishes. Desire has no limit but itself. Passion, the love and expectation
-of pleasure, is infinite, extravagant, inexhaustible, till experience
-comes to check and kill it. Juliet exclaims on her first interview
-with Romeo—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘My bounty is as boundless as the sea,</div>
- <div class='line'>My love as deep.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>And why should it not? What was to hinder the thrilling tide of
-pleasure, which had just gushed from her heart, from flowing on
-without stint or measure, but experience which she was yet without?
-What was to abate the transport of the first sweet sense of pleasure,
-which her heart and her senses had just tasted, but indifference which
-she was yet a stranger to? What was there to check the ardour of
-hope, of faith, of constancy, just rising in her breast, but disappointment
-which she had not yet felt! As are the desires and the hopes
-of youthful passion, such is the keenness of its disappointments, and
-their baleful effect. Such is the transition in this play from the
-highest bliss to the lowest despair, from the nuptial couch to an
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_250'>250</span>untimely grave. The only evil that even in apprehension befalls the
-two lovers is the loss of the greatest possible felicity; yet this loss is
-fatal to both, for they had rather part with life than bear the thought
-of surviving all that had made life dear to them. In all this,
-Shakespear has but followed nature, which existed in his time, as
-well as now. The modern philosophy, which reduces the whole
-theory of the mind to habitual impressions, and leaves the natural
-impulses of passion and imagination out of the account, had not then
-been discovered; or if it had, would have been little calculated for
-the uses of poetry.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is the inadequacy of the same false system of philosophy to
-account for the strength of our earliest attachments, which has led
-Mr. Wordsworth to indulge in the mystical visions of Platonism in
-his Ode on the Progress of Life. He has very admirably described
-the vividness of our impressions in youth and childhood, and how
-‘they fade by degrees into the light of common day,’ and he ascribes
-the change to the supposition of a pre-existent state, as if our early
-thoughts were nearer heaven, reflections of former trails of glory,
-shadows of our past being. This is idle. It is not from the knowledge
-of the past that the first impressions of things derive their gloss
-and splendour, but from our ignorance of the future, which fills the
-void to come with the warmth of our desires, with our gayest hopes,
-and brightest fancies. It is the obscurity spread before it that colours
-the prospect of life with hope, as it is the cloud which reflects the
-rainbow. There is no occasion to resort to any mystical union and
-transmission of feeling through different states of being to account for
-the romantic enthusiasm of youth; nor to plant the root of hope in
-the grave, nor to derive it from the skies. Its root is in the heart of
-man: it lifts its head above the stars. Desire and imagination are
-inmates of the human breast. The heaven ‘that lies about us in our
-infancy’ is only a new world, of which we know nothing but what
-we wish it to be, and believe all that we wish. In youth and boyhood,
-the world we live in is the world of desire, and of fancy: it is
-experience that brings us down to the world of reality. What is it
-that in youth sheds a dewy light round the evening star? That
-makes the daisy look so bright? That perfumes the hyacinth?
-That embalms the first kiss of love? It is the delight of novelty,
-and the seeing no end to the pleasure that we fondly believe is still in
-store for us. The heart revels in the luxury of its own thoughts,
-and is unable to sustain the weight of hope and love that presses upon
-it.—The effects of the passion of love alone might have dissipated
-Mr. Wordsworth’s theory, if he means any thing more by it than an
-ingenious and poetical allegory. <em>That</em> at least is not a link in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_251'>251</span>chain let down from other worlds; ‘the purple light of love’ is not
-a dim reflection of the smiles of celestial bliss. It does not appear
-till the middle of life, and then seems like ‘another morn risen on
-mid-day.’ In this respect the soul comes into the world ‘in utter
-nakedness.’ Love waits for the ripening of the youthful blood. The
-sense of pleasure precedes the love of pleasure, but with the sense of
-pleasure, as soon as it is felt, come thronging infinite desires and hopes
-of pleasure, and love is mature as soon as born. It withers and it
-dies almost as soon!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This play presents a beautiful <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">coup-d’œil</span></span></i> of the progress of human
-life. In thought it occupies years, and embraces the circle of the
-affections from childhood to old age. Juliet has become a great girl,
-a young woman since we first remember her a little thing in the idle
-prattle of the nurse. Lady Capulet was about her age when she
-became a mother, and old Capulet somewhat impatiently tells his
-younger visitors,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in12'>——‘I’ve seen the day,</div>
- <div class='line'>That I have worn a visor, and could tell</div>
- <div class='line'>A whispering tale in a fair lady’s ear,</div>
- <div class='line'>Such as would please: ’tis gone, ’tis gone, ’tis gone.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Thus one period of life makes way for the following, and one
-generation pushes another off the stage. One of the most striking
-passages to show the intense feeling of youth in this play is Capulet’s
-invitation to Paris to visit his entertainment.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘At my poor house, look to behold this night</div>
- <div class='line'>Earth-treading stars that make dark heav’n light;</div>
- <div class='line'>Such comfort as do lusty young men feel</div>
- <div class='line'>When well-apparel’d April on the heel</div>
- <div class='line'>Of limping winter treads, even such delight</div>
- <div class='line'>Among fresh female-buds shall you this night</div>
- <div class='line'>Inherit at my house.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The feelings of youth and of the spring are here blended together
-like the breath of opening flowers. Images of vernal beauty appear to
-have floated before the author’s mind, in writing this poem, in profusion.
-Here is another of exquisite beauty, brought in more by
-accident than by necessity. Montague declares of his son smit with a
-hopeless passion, which he will not reveal—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘But he, his own affection’s counsellor,</div>
- <div class='line'>Is to himself so secret and so close,</div>
- <div class='line'>So far from sounding and discovery,</div>
- <div class='line'>As is the bud bit with an envious worm,</div>
- <div class='line'>Ere he can spread his sweet leaves to the air,</div>
- <div class='line'>Or dedicate his beauty to the sun.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_252'>252</span>This casual description is as full of passionate beauty as when
-Romeo dwells in frantic fondness on ‘the white wonder of his Juliet’s
-hand.’ The reader may, if he pleases, contrast the exquisite pastoral
-simplicity of the above lines with the gorgeous description of Juliet
-when Romeo first sees her at her father’s house, surrounded by
-company and artificial splendour.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘What lady’s that which doth enrich the hand</div>
- <div class='line'>Of yonder knight?</div>
- <div class='line'>O she doth teach the torches to burn bright;</div>
- <div class='line'>Her beauty hangs upon the cheek of night,</div>
- <div class='line'>Like a rich jewel in an Æthiop’s ear.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>It would be hard to say which of the two garden scenes is the
-finest, that where he first converses with his love, or takes leave of
-her the morning after their marriage. Both are like a heaven upon
-earth; the blissful bowers of Paradise let down upon this lower world.
-We will give only one passage of these well known scenes to shew
-the perfect refinement and delicacy of Shakespear’s conception of the
-female character. It is wonderful how Collins, who was a critic and
-a poet of great sensibility, should have encouraged the common error
-on this subject by saying—‘But stronger Shakespear felt for man
-alone.’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The passage we mean is Juliet’s apology for her maiden boldness.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Thou know’st the mask of night is on my face;</div>
- <div class='line'>Else would a maiden blush bepaint my cheek</div>
- <div class='line'>For that which thou hast heard me speak to-night.</div>
- <div class='line'>Fain would I dwell on form, fain, fain deny</div>
- <div class='line'>What I have spoke—but farewel compliment:</div>
- <div class='line'>Dost thou love me? I know thou wilt say, ay,</div>
- <div class='line'>And I will take thee at thy word—Yet if thou swear’st,</div>
- <div class='line'>Thou may’st prove false; at lovers’ perjuries</div>
- <div class='line'>They say Jove laughs. Oh gentle Romeo,</div>
- <div class='line'>If thou dost love, pronounce it faithfully;</div>
- <div class='line'>Or if thou think I am too quickly won,</div>
- <div class='line'>I’ll frown and be perverse, and say thee nay,</div>
- <div class='line'>So thou wilt woo: but else not for the world.</div>
- <div class='line'>In truth, fair Montague, I am too fond;</div>
- <div class='line'>And therefore thou may’st think my ‘haviour light;</div>
- <div class='line'>But trust me, gentleman, I’ll prove more true</div>
- <div class='line'>Than those that have more cunning to be strange.</div>
- <div class='line'>I should have been more strange, I must confess</div>
- <div class='line'>But that thou over-heard’st, ere I was ware,</div>
- <div class='line'>My true love’s passion; therefore pardon me,</div>
- <div class='line'>And not impute this yielding to light love,</div>
- <div class='line'>Which the dark night hath so discovered.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_253'>253</span>In this and all the rest, her heart, fluttering between pleasure, hope,
-and fear, seems to have dictated to her tongue, and ‘calls true love
-spoken simple modesty.’ Of the same sort, but bolder in virgin
-innocence, is her soliloquy after her marriage with Romeo.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Gallop apace, you fiery-footed steeds,</div>
- <div class='line'>Towards Phœbus’ mansion; such a waggoner</div>
- <div class='line'>As Phaëton would whip you to the west,</div>
- <div class='line'>And bring in cloudy night immediately.</div>
- <div class='line'>Spread thy close curtain, love-performing night;</div>
- <div class='line'>That run-aways’ eyes may wink; and Romeo</div>
- <div class='line'>Leap to these arms, untalked of, and unseen!——</div>
- <div class='line'>Lovers can see to do their amorous rites</div>
- <div class='line'>By their own beauties: or if love be blind,</div>
- <div class='line'>It best agrees with night.—Come, civil night,</div>
- <div class='line'>Thou sober-suited matron, all in black,</div>
- <div class='line'>And learn me how to lose a winning match,</div>
- <div class='line'>Play’d for a pair of stainless maidenhoods:</div>
- <div class='line'>Hold my unmann’d blood bating in my cheeks,</div>
- <div class='line'>With thy black mantle; till strange love, grown bold,</div>
- <div class='line'>Thinks true love acted, simple modesty.</div>
- <div class='line'>Come night!—Come, Romeo! come, thou day in night;</div>
- <div class='line'>For thou wilt lie upon the wings of night</div>
- <div class='line'>Whiter than new snow on a raven’s back.——</div>
- <div class='line'>Come, gentle night; come, loving, black-brow’d night,</div>
- <div class='line'>Give me my Romeo: and when he shall die,</div>
- <div class='line'>Take him and cut him out in little stars,</div>
- <div class='line'>And he will make the face of heaven so fine,</div>
- <div class='line'>That all the world shall be in love with night,</div>
- <div class='line'>And pay no worship to the garish sun.——</div>
- <div class='line'>O, I have bought the mansion of a love,</div>
- <div class='line'>But not possess’d it; and though I am sold,</div>
- <div class='line'>Not yet enjoy’d: so tedious is this day,</div>
- <div class='line'>As is the night before some festival</div>
- <div class='line'>To an impatient child, that hath new robes,</div>
- <div class='line'>And may not wear them.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>We the rather insert this passage here, inasmuch as we have no
-doubt it has been expunged from the Family Shakespear. Such
-critics do not perceive that the feelings of the heart sanctify, without
-disguising, the impulses of nature. Without refinement themselves,
-they confound modesty with hypocrisy. Not so the German critic,
-Schlegel. Speaking of <span class='sc'>Romeo and Juliet</span>, he says, ‘It was reserved
-for Shakespear to unite purity of heart and the glow of imagination,
-sweetness and dignity of manners and passionate violence, in one ideal
-picture.’ The character is indeed one of perfect truth and sweetness.
-It has nothing forward, nothing coy, nothing affected or coquettish
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_254'>254</span>about it;—it is a pure effusion of nature. It is as frank as it is
-modest, for it has no thought that it wishes to conceal. It reposes
-in conscious innocence on the strength of its affections. Its delicacy
-does not consist in coldness and reserve, but in combining warmth of
-imagination and tenderness of heart with the most voluptuous sensibility.
-Love is a gentle flame that rarifies and expands her whole
-being. What an idea of trembling haste and airy grace, borne upon
-the thoughts of love, does the Friar’s exclamation give of her, as she
-approaches his cell to be married—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Here comes the lady. Oh, so light of foot</div>
- <div class='line'>Will ne’er wear out the everlasting flint:</div>
- <div class='line'>A lover may bestride the gossamer,</div>
- <div class='line'>That idles in the wanton summer air,</div>
- <div class='line'>And yet not fall, so light is vanity.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The tragic part of this character is of a piece with the rest. It is
-the heroic founded on tenderness and delicacy. Of this kind are her
-resolution to follow the Friar’s advice, and the conflict in her bosom
-between apprehension and love when she comes to take the sleeping
-poison. Shakespear is blamed for the mixture of low characters.
-If this is a deformity, it is the source of a thousand beauties. One
-instance is the contrast between the guileless simplicity of Juliet’s
-attachment to her first love, and the convenient policy of the nurse in
-advising her to marry Paris, which excites such indignation in her
-mistress. ‘Ancient damnation! oh most wicked fiend,’ etc.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Romeo is Hamlet in love. There is the same rich exuberance of
-passion and sentiment in the one, that there is of thought and sentiment
-in the other. Both are absent and self-involved, both live out
-of themselves in a world of imagination. Hamlet is abstracted from
-every thing; Romeo is abstracted from every thing but his love, and
-lost in it. His ‘frail thoughts dally with faint surmise,’ and are
-fashioned out of the suggestions of hope, ‘the flatteries of sleep.’ He
-is himself only in his Juliet; she is his only reality, his heart’s true
-home and idol. The rest of the world is to him a passing dream.
-How finely is this character pourtrayed where he recollects himself
-on seeing Paris slain at the tomb of Juliet!—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘What said my man, when my betossed soul</div>
- <div class='line'>Did not attend him as we rode? I think</div>
- <div class='line'>He told me Paris should have married Juliet.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>And again, just before he hears the sudden tidings of her death—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘If I may trust the flattery of sleep,</div>
- <div class='line'>My dreams presage some joyful news at hand;</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_255'>255</span>My bosom’s lord sits lightly on his throne,</div>
- <div class='line'>And all this day an unaccustom’d spirit</div>
- <div class='line'>Lifts me above the ground with cheerful thoughts.</div>
- <div class='line'>I dreamt my lady came and found me dead,</div>
- <div class='line'>(Strange dream! that gives a dead man leave to think)</div>
- <div class='line'>And breath’d such life with kisses on my lips,</div>
- <div class='line'>That I reviv’d and was an emperour.</div>
- <div class='line'>Ah me! how sweet is love itself possess’d,</div>
- <div class='line'>When but love’s shadows are so rich in joy!’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Romeo’s passion for Juliet is not a first love: it succeeds and
-drives out his passion for another mistress, Rosaline, as the sun hides
-the stars. This is perhaps an artifice (not absolutely necessary) to
-give us a higher opinion of the lady, while the first absolute surrender
-of her heart to him enhances the richness of the prize. The commencement,
-progress, and ending of his second passion are however
-complete in themselves, not injured if they are not bettered by the
-first. The outline of the play is taken from an Italian novel; but
-the dramatic arrangement of the different scenes between the lovers,
-the more than dramatic interest in the progress of the story, the
-developement of the characters with time and circumstances, just
-according to the degree and kind of interest excited, are not inferior
-to the expression of passion and nature. It has been ingeniously
-remarked among other proofs of skill in the contrivance of the fable,
-that the improbability of the main incident in the piece, the administering
-of the sleeping-potion, is softened and obviated from the
-beginning by the introduction of the Friar on his first appearance
-culling simples and descanting on their virtues. Of the passionate
-scenes in this tragedy, that between the Friar and Romeo when he
-is told of his sentence of banishment, that between Juliet and the
-Nurse when she hears of it, and of the death of her cousin Tybalt
-(which bear no proportion in her mind, when passion after the first
-shock of surprise throws its weight into the scale of her affections)
-and the last scene at the tomb, are among the most natural and overpowering.
-In all of these it is not merely the force of any one
-passion that is given, but the slightest and most unlooked-for transitions
-from one to another, the mingling currents of every different
-feeling rising up and prevailing in turn, swayed by the master-mind
-of the poet, as the waves undulate beneath the gliding storm. Thus
-when Juliet has by her complaints encouraged the Nurse to say,
-‘Shame come to Romeo,’ she instantly repels the wish, which she
-had herself occasioned, by answering—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Blister’d be thy tongue</div>
- <div class='line'>For such a wish! He was not born to shame.</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_256'>256</span>Upon his brow shame is ashamed to sit,</div>
- <div class='line'>For ’tis a throne where honour may be crown’d</div>
- <div class='line'>Sole monarch of the universal earth!</div>
- <div class='line'>O, what a beast was I to chide him so?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Nurse.</em> Will you speak well of him that kill’d your cousin?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Juliet.</em> Shall I speak ill of him that is my husband?</div>
- <div class='line'>Ah my poor lord, what tongue shall smooth thy name,</div>
- <div class='line'>When I, thy three-hours’ wife, have mangled it?’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>And then follows on the neck of her remorse and returning fondness,
-that wish treading almost on the brink of impiety, but still held back
-by the strength of her devotion to her lord, that ‘father, mother, nay,
-or both were dead,’ rather than Romeo banished. If she requires
-any other excuse, it is in the manner in which Romeo echoes her
-frantic grief and disappointment in the next scene at being banished
-from her.—Perhaps one of the finest pieces of acting that ever was
-witnessed on the stage, is Mr. Kean’s manner of doing this scene
-and his repetition of the word, <em>Banished</em>. He treads close indeed
-upon the genius of his author.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A passage which this celebrated actor and able commentator on
-Shakespear (actors are the best commentators on the poets) did not
-give with equal truth or force of feeling was the one which Romeo
-makes at the tomb of Juliet, before he drinks the poison.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in8'>——‘Let me peruse this face—</div>
- <div class='line'>Mercutio’s kinsman! noble county Paris!</div>
- <div class='line'>What said my man, when my betossed soul</div>
- <div class='line'>Did not attend him as we rode? I think,</div>
- <div class='line'>He told me Paris should have married Juliet:</div>
- <div class='line'>Said he not so? or did I dream it so?</div>
- <div class='line'>Or am I mad, hearing him talk of Juliet,</div>
- <div class='line'>To think it was so?——O, give me thy hand,</div>
- <div class='line'>One writ with me in sour misfortune’s book!</div>
- <div class='line'>I’ll bury thee in a triumphant grave——</div>
- <div class='line'>For here lies Juliet.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in10'>——O, my love! my wife!</div>
- <div class='line'>Death that hath suck’d the honey of thy breath,</div>
- <div class='line'>Hath had no power yet upon thy beauty:</div>
- <div class='line'>Thou art not conquer’d; beauty’s ensign yet</div>
- <div class='line'>Is crimson in thy lips, and in thy cheeks,</div>
- <div class='line'>And Death’s pale flag is not advanced there.——</div>
- <div class='line'>Tybalt, ly’st thou there in thy bloody sheet?</div>
- <div class='line'>O, what more favour can I do to thee,</div>
- <div class='line'>Than with that hand that cut thy youth in twain,</div>
- <div class='line'>To sunder his that was thine enemy?</div>
- <div class='line'>Forgive me, cousin! Ah, dear Juliet,</div>
- <div class='line'>Why art thou yet so fair! Shall I believe</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_257'>257</span>That unsubstantial death is amorous;</div>
- <div class='line'>And that the lean abhorred monster keeps</div>
- <div class='line'>Thee here in dark to be his paramour!</div>
- <div class='line'>For fear of that, I will stay still with thee;</div>
- <div class='line'>And never from this palace of dim night</div>
- <div class='line'>Depart again: here, here will I remain</div>
- <div class='line'>With worms that are thy chamber-maids; O, here</div>
- <div class='line'>Will I set up my everlasting rest;</div>
- <div class='line'>And shake the yoke of inauspicious stars</div>
- <div class='line'>From this world-wearied flesh.—Eyes, look your last!</div>
- <div class='line'>Arms, take your last embrace! and lips, O you,</div>
- <div class='line'>The doors of breath, seal with a righteous kiss</div>
- <div class='line'>A dateless bargain to engrossing death!—</div>
- <div class='line'>Come, bitter conduct, come unsavoury guide!</div>
- <div class='line'>Thou desperate pilot, now at once run on</div>
- <div class='line'>The dashing rocks my sea-sick weary bark!</div>
- <div class='line'>Here’s to my love!—[<em>Drinks.</em>] O, true apothecary!</div>
- <div class='line'>Thy drugs are quick.—Thus with a kiss I die.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The lines in this speech, describing the loveliness of Juliet, who is
-supposed to be dead, have been compared to those in which it is
-said of Cleopatra after her death, that she looked ‘as she would take
-another Antony in her strong toil of grace’; and a question has been
-started which is the finest, that we do not pretend to decide. We
-can more easily decide between Shakespear and any other author,
-than between him and himself.—Shall we quote any more passages to
-shew his genius or the beauty of <span class='sc'>Romeo and Juliet</span>? At that rate, we
-might quote the whole. The late Mr. Sheridan, on being shewn a
-volume of the Beauties of Shakespear, very properly asked—‘But
-where are the other eleven?’ The character of Mercutio in this
-play is one of the most mercurial and spirited of the productions of
-Shakespear’s comic muse.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>LEAR</h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>We wish that we could pass this play over, and say nothing about
-it. All that we can say must fall far short of the subject; or even
-of what we ourselves conceive of it. To attempt to give a description
-of the play itself or of its effect upon the mind, is mere impertinence;
-yet we must say something.—It is then the best of all
-Shakespear’s plays, for it is the one in which he was the most in
-earnest. He was here fairly caught in the web of his own imagination.
-The passion which he has taken as his subject is that which
-strikes its root deepest into the human heart; of which the bond is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_258'>258</span>the hardest to be unloosed; and the cancelling and tearing to pieces
-of which gives the greatest revulsion to the frame. This depth of
-nature, this force of passion, this tug and war of the elements of our
-being, this firm faith in filial piety, and the giddy anarchy and whirling
-tumult of the thoughts at finding this prop failing it, the contrast
-between the fixed, immoveable basis of natural affection, and the rapid,
-irregular starts of imagination, suddenly wrenched from all its
-accustomed holds and resting-places in the soul, this is what Shakespear
-has given, and what nobody else but he could give. So we
-believe.—The mind of Lear, staggering between the weight of
-attachment and the hurried movements of passion, is like a tall ship
-driven about by the winds, buffetted by the furious waves, but that
-still rides above the storm, having its anchor fixed in the bottom of
-the sea; or it is like the sharp rock circled by the eddying whirlpool
-that foams and beats against it, or like the solid promontory pushed
-from its basis by the force of an earthquake.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The character of Lear itself is very finely conceived for the purpose.
-It is the only ground on which such a story could be built with
-the greatest truth and effect. It is his rash haste, his violent impetuosity,
-his blindness to every thing but the dictates of his passions or
-affections, that produces all his misfortunes, that aggravates his
-impatience of them, that enforces our pity for him. The part which
-Cordelia bears in the scene is extremely beautiful: the story is almost
-told in the first words she utters. We see at once the precipice on
-which the poor old king stands from his own extravagant and credulous
-importunity, the indiscreet simplicity of her love (which, to be
-sure, has a little of her father’s obstinacy in it) and the hollowness of
-her sisters’ pretensions. Almost the first burst of that noble tide of
-passion, which runs through the play, is in the remonstrance of Kent
-to his royal master on the injustice of his sentence against his youngest
-daughter—‘Be Kent unmannerly, when Lear is mad!’ This manly
-plainness, which draws down on him the displeasure of the unadvised
-king, is worthy of the fidelity with which he adheres to his fallen
-fortunes. The true character of the two eldest daughters, Regan
-and Gonerill (they are so thoroughly hateful that we do not even like
-to repeat their names) breaks out in their answer to Cordelia who
-desires them to treat their father well—‘Prescribe not us our duties’—their
-hatred of advice being in proportion to their determination to
-do wrong, and to their hypocritical pretensions to do right. Their
-deliberate hypocrisy adds the last finishing to the odiousness of their
-characters. It is the absence of this detestable quality that is the
-only relief in the character of Edmund the Bastard, and that at
-times reconciles us to him. We are not tempted to exaggerate the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_259'>259</span>guilt of his conduct, when he himself gives it up as a bad business,
-and writes himself down ‘plain villain.’ Nothing more can be said
-about it. His religious honesty in this respect is admirable. One
-speech of his is worth a million. His father, Gloster, whom he has
-just deluded with a forged story of his brother Edgar’s designs against
-his life, accounts for his unnatural behaviour and the strange depravity
-of the times from the late eclipses in the sun and moon. Edmund,
-who is in the secret, says when he is gone—‘This is the excellent
-foppery of the world, that when we are sick in fortune (often the surfeits
-of our own behaviour) we make guilty of our disasters the sun,
-the moon, and stars: as if we were villains on necessity; fools by
-heavenly compulsion; knaves, thieves, and treacherous by spherical
-predominance; drunkards, liars, and adulterers by an enforced obedience
-of planetary influence; and all that we are evil in, by a divine
-thrusting on. An admirable evasion of whore-master man, to lay his
-goatish disposition on the charge of a star! My father compounded
-with my mother under the Dragon’s tail, and my nativity was under
-Ursa Major: so that it follows, I am rough and lecherous. Tut!
-I should have been what I am, had the maidenliness star in the firmament
-twinkled on my bastardising.’—The whole character, its careless,
-light-hearted villainy, contrasted with the sullen, rancorous
-malignity of Regan and Gonerill, its connection with the conduct of
-the under-plot, in which Gloster’s persecution of one of his sons and
-the ingratitude of another, form a counterpart to the mistakes and
-misfortunes of Lear,—his double amour with the two sisters, and the
-share which he has in bringing about the fatal catastrophe, are all
-managed with an uncommon degree of skill and power.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It has been said, and we think justly, that the third act of <cite>Othello</cite>
-and the three first acts of <span class='sc'>Lear</span>, are Shakespear’s great master-pieces
-in the logic of passion: that they contain the highest examples not
-only of the force of individual passion, but of its dramatic vicissitudes
-and striking effects arising from the different circumstances and
-characters of the persons speaking. We see the ebb and flow of the
-feeling, its pauses and feverish starts, its impatience of opposition, its
-accumulating force when it has time to recollect itself, the manner in
-which it avails itself of every passing word or gesture, its haste to
-repel insinuation, the alternate contraction and dilatation of the soul,
-and all ‘the dazzling fence of controversy’ in this mortal combat with
-poisoned weapons, aimed at the heart, where each wound is fatal.
-We have seen in <cite>Othello</cite>, how the unsuspecting frankness and impetuous
-passions of the Moor are played upon and exasperated by the artful
-dexterity of Iago. In the present play, that which aggravates the
-sense of sympathy in the reader, and of uncontroulable anguish in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_260'>260</span>swoln heart of Lear, is the petrifying indifference, the cold, calculating,
-obdurate selfishness of his daughters. His keen passions seem
-whetted on their stony hearts. The contrast would be too painful,
-the shock too great, but for the intervention of the Fool, whose well-timed
-levity comes in to break the continuity of feeling when it can
-no longer be borne, and to bring into play again the fibres of the heart
-just as they are growing rigid from overstrained excitement. The
-imagination is glad to take refuge in the half-comic, half-serious comments
-of the Fool, just as the mind under the extreme anguish of a
-surgical operation vents itself in sallies of wit. The character was
-also a grotesque ornament of the barbarous times, in which alone the
-tragic ground-work of the story could be laid. In another point of
-view it is indispensable, inasmuch as while it is a diversion to the too
-great intensity of our disgust, it carries the pathos to the highest
-pitch of which it is capable, by shewing the pitiable weakness of the
-old king’s conduct and its irretrievable consequences in the most
-familiar point of view. Lear may well ‘beat at the gate which let
-his folly in,’ after, as the Fool says, ‘he has made his daughters his
-mothers.’ The character is dropped in the third act to make room
-for the entrance of Edgar as Mad Tom, which well accords with the
-increasing bustle and wildness of the incidents; and nothing can be
-more complete than the distinction between Lear’s real and Edgar’s
-assumed madness, while the resemblance in the cause of their distresses,
-from the severing of the nearest ties of natural affection, keeps
-up a unity of interest. Shakespear’s mastery over his subject, if it
-was not art, was owing to a knowledge of the connecting links of the
-passions, and their effect upon the mind, still more wonderful than
-any systematic adherence to rules, and that anticipated and outdid
-all the efforts of the most refined art, not inspired and rendered
-instinctive by genius.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>One of the most perfect displays of dramatic power is the first
-interview between Lear and his daughter, after the designed affronts
-upon him, which till one of his knights reminds him of them, his
-sanguine temperament had led him to overlook. He returns with his
-train from hunting, and his usual impatience breaks out in his first
-words, ‘Let me not stay a jot for dinner; go, get it ready.’ He
-then encounters the faithful Kent in disguise, and retains him in his
-service; and the first trial of his honest duty is to trip up the heels of
-the officious Steward who makes so prominent and despicable a figure
-through the piece. On the entrance of Gonerill the following dialogue
-takes place:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Lear.</em> How now, daughter? what makes that frontlet on?</div>
- <div class='line'>Methinks, you are too much of late i’ the frown.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'><span class='pageno' id='Page_261'>261</span><em>Fool.</em> Thou wast a pretty fellow, when thou had’st no need to care for
-her frowning; now thou art an O without a figure: I am better than thou
-art now; I am a fool, thou art nothing.——Yes, forsooth, I will hold my
-tongue; [<em>To Gonerill</em>], so your face bids me, though you say nothing.
-Mum, mum.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>He that keeps nor crust nor crum,</div>
- <div class='line'>Weary of all, shall want some.——</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>That’s a sheal’d peascod! <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>[<em>Pointing to Lear.</em><span class='hidev'>|</span></span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Gonerill.</em> Not only, sir, this your all-licens’d fool,</div>
- <div class='line'>But other of your insolent retinue</div>
- <div class='line'>Do hourly carp and quarrel; breaking forth</div>
- <div class='line'>In rank and not-to-be-endured riots.</div>
- <div class='line'>I had thought, by making this well known unto you,</div>
- <div class='line'>To have found a safe redress; but now grow fearful,</div>
- <div class='line'>By what yourself too late have spoke and done,</div>
- <div class='line'>That you protect this course, and put it on</div>
- <div class='line'>By your allowance; which if you should, the fault</div>
- <div class='line'>Would not ‘scape censure, nor the redresses sleep,</div>
- <div class='line'>Which in the tender of a wholesome weal,</div>
- <div class='line'>Might in their working do you that offence,</div>
- <div class='line'>(Which else were shame) that then necessity</div>
- <div class='line'>Would call discreet proceeding.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Fool.</em> For you trow, nuncle,</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>The hedge sparrow fed the cuckoo so long,</div>
- <div class='line in4'>That it had its head bit off by its young.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>So out went the candle, and we were left darkling.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Lear.</em> Are you our daughter?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Gonerill.</em> Come, sir,</div>
- <div class='line'>I would, you would make use of that good wisdom</div>
- <div class='line'>Whereof I know you are fraught; and put away</div>
- <div class='line'>These dispositions, which of late transform you</div>
- <div class='line'>From what you rightly are.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Fool.</em> May not an ass know when the cart draws the horse?</div>
- <div class='line in2'>——Whoop, Jug, I love thee.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Lear.</em> Does any here know me?—Why, this is not Lear:</div>
- <div class='line'>Does Lear walk thus? speak thus?—Where are his eyes?</div>
- <div class='line'>Either his notion weakens, or his discernings</div>
- <div class='line'>Are lethargy’d——Ha! waking?—’Tis not so.——</div>
- <div class='line'>Who is it that can tell me who I am?—Lear’s shadow?</div>
- <div class='line'>I would learn that: for by the marks</div>
- <div class='line'>Of sov’reignty, of knowledge, and of reason,</div>
- <div class='line'>I should be false persuaded I had daughters.——</div>
- <div class='line'>Your name, fair gentlewoman?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Gonerill.</em> Come, sir:</div>
- <div class='line'>This admiration is much o’ the favour</div>
- <div class='line'>Of other your new pranks. I do beseech you</div>
- <div class='line'>To understand my purposes aright:</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_262'>262</span>As you are old and reverend, you should be wise:</div>
- <div class='line'>Here do you keep a hundred knights and squires;</div>
- <div class='line'>Men so disorder’d, so debauch’d, and bold,</div>
- <div class='line'>That this our court, infected with their manners,</div>
- <div class='line'>Shews like a riotous inn: epicurism and lust</div>
- <div class='line'>Make it more like a tavern, or a brothel,</div>
- <div class='line'>Than a grac’d palace. The shame itself doth speak</div>
- <div class='line'>For instant remedy: be then desir’d</div>
- <div class='line'>By her, that else will take the thing she begs,</div>
- <div class='line'>A little to disquantity your train;</div>
- <div class='line'>And the remainder, that shall still depend,</div>
- <div class='line'>To be such men as may besort your age,</div>
- <div class='line'>And know themselves and you.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Lear.</em> Darkness and devils!——</div>
- <div class='line'>Saddle my horses; call my train together.——</div>
- <div class='line'>Degenerate bastard! I’ll not trouble thee;</div>
- <div class='line'>Yet have I left a daughter.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Gonerill.</em> You strike my people; and your disorder’d rabble</div>
- <div class='line'>Make servants of their betters.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in14'><em>Enter</em> <span class='sc'>Albany</span>.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Lear.</em> Woe, that too late repents—O, sir, are you come?</div>
- <div class='line'>Is it your will? speak, sir.—Prepare my horses.—— <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>[<em>To Albany.</em><span class='hidev'>|</span></span></div>
- <div class='line'>Ingratitude! thou marble-hearted fiend,</div>
- <div class='line'>More hideous, when thou shew’st thee in a child,</div>
- <div class='line'>Than the sea-monster!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Albany.</em> Pray, sir, be patient.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Lear.</em> Detested kite! thou liest. <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>[<em>To Gonerill.</em><span class='hidev'>|</span></span></div>
- <div class='line'>My train are men of choice and rarest parts,</div>
- <div class='line'>That all particulars of duty know;</div>
- <div class='line'>And in the most exact regard support</div>
- <div class='line'>The worships of their name.——O most small fault,</div>
- <div class='line'>How ugly didst thou in Cordelia shew!</div>
- <div class='line'>Which, like an engine, wrench’d my frame of nature</div>
- <div class='line'>From the fixt place; drew from my heart all love,</div>
- <div class='line'>And added to the gall. O Lear, Lear, Lear!</div>
- <div class='line'>Beat at the gate, that let thy folly in, <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>[<em>Striking his head.</em><span class='hidev'>|</span></span></div>
- <div class='line'>And thy dear judgment out!——Go, go, my people!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Albany.</em> My lord, I am guiltless, as I am ignorant</div>
- <div class='line'>Of what hath mov’d you.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Lear.</em> It may be so, my lord——</div>
- <div class='line'>Hear, nature, hear! dear goddess, hear!</div>
- <div class='line'>Suspend thy purpose, if thou didst intend</div>
- <div class='line'>To make this creature fruitful!</div>
- <div class='line'>Into her womb convey sterility;</div>
- <div class='line'>Dry up in her the organs of increase;</div>
- <div class='line'>And from her derogate body never spring</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_263'>263</span>A babe to honour her! If she must teem,</div>
- <div class='line'>Create her child of spleen: that it may live,</div>
- <div class='line'>To be a thwart disnatur’d torment to her!</div>
- <div class='line'>Let it stamp wrinkles in her brow of youth;</div>
- <div class='line'>With cadent tears fret channels in her cheeks;</div>
- <div class='line'>Turn all her mother’s pains, and benefits,</div>
- <div class='line'>To laughter and contempt; that she may feel</div>
- <div class='line'>How sharper than a serpent’s tooth it is</div>
- <div class='line'>To have a thankless child!——Away, away! <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>[<em>Exit.</em><span class='hidev'>|</span></span></div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Albany.</em> Now, gods, that we adore, whereof comes this?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Gonerill.</em> Never afflict yourself to know the cause;</div>
- <div class='line'>But let his disposition have that scope</div>
- <div class='line'>That dotage gives it.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in16'><em>Re-enter</em> <span class='sc'>Lear</span>.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Lear.</em> What, fifty of my followers at a clap!</div>
- <div class='line'>Within a fortnight!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Albany.</em> What’s the matter, sir?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Lear.</em> I’ll tell thee; life and death! I am asham’d</div>
- <div class='line'>That thou hast power to shake my manhood thus: <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>[<em>To Gonerill.</em><span class='hidev'>|</span></span></div>
- <div class='line'>That these hot tears, which break from me perforce,</div>
- <div class='line'>Should make thee worth them.——Blasts and fogs upon thee!</div>
- <div class='line'>The untented woundings of a father’s curse</div>
- <div class='line'>Pierce every sense about thee!——Old fond eyes</div>
- <div class='line'>Beweep this cause again, I’ll pluck you out;</div>
- <div class='line'>And cast you, with the waters that you lose,</div>
- <div class='line'>To temper clay.——Ha! is it come to this?</div>
- <div class='line'>Let it be so:——Yet have I left a daughter,</div>
- <div class='line'>Who, I am sure, is kind and comfortable;</div>
- <div class='line'>When she shall hear this of thee, with her nails</div>
- <div class='line'>She’ll flea thy wolfish visage. Thou shalt find,</div>
- <div class='line'>That I’ll resume the shape, which thou dost think</div>
- <div class='line'>I have cast off for ever. <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>[<em>Exeunt Lear, Kent, and Attendants.</em>’<span class='hidev'>|</span></span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>This is certainly fine: no wonder that Lear says after it, ‘O let
-me not be mad, not mad, sweet heavens,’ feeling its effects by anticipation;
-but fine as is this burst of rage and indignation at the first
-blow aimed at his hopes and expectations, it is nothing near so fine
-as what follows from his double disappointment, and his lingering
-efforts to see which of them he shall lean upon for support and find
-comfort in, when both his daughters turn against his age and weakness.
-It is with some difficulty that Lear gets to speak with his
-daughter Regan, and her husband, at Gloster’s castle. In concert
-with Gonerill they have left their own home on purpose to avoid
-him. His apprehensions are first alarmed by this circumstance, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_264'>264</span>when Gloster, whose guests they are, urges the fiery temper of the
-Duke of Cornwall as an excuse for not importuning him a second
-time, Lear breaks out—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Vengeance! Plague! Death! Confusion!——</div>
- <div class='line'>Fiery? What quality? Why, Gloster, Gloster,</div>
- <div class='line'>I’d speak with the Duke of Cornwall, and his wife.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Afterwards, feeling perhaps not well himself, he is inclined to
-admit their excuse from illness, but then recollecting that they have
-set his messenger (Kent) in the stocks, all his suspicions are roused
-again, and he insists on seeing them.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>‘<em>Enter</em> <span class='sc'>Cornwall</span>, <span class='sc'>Regan</span>, <span class='sc'>Gloster</span>, <em>and Servants</em>.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Lear.</em> Good-morrow to you both.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Cornwall.</em> Hail to your grace! <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>[<em>Kent is set at liberty.</em><span class='hidev'>|</span></span></div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Regan.</em> I am glad to see your highness.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Lear.</em> Regan, I think you are; I know what reason</div>
- <div class='line'>I have to think so: if thou should’st not be glad,</div>
- <div class='line'>I would divorce me from thy mother’s tomb,</div>
- <div class='line'>Sepulch’ring an adultress.——O, are you free? <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>[<em>To Kent.</em><span class='hidev'>|</span></span></div>
- <div class='line'>Some other time for that.——Beloved Regan,</div>
- <div class='line'>Thy sister’s naught: O Regan, she hath tied</div>
- <div class='line'>Sharp-tooth’d unkindness, like a vulture, here——</div>
- <div class='line in45'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>[<em>Points to his heart.</em><span class='hidev'>|</span></span></div>
- <div class='line'>I can scarce speak to thee; thou’lt not believe,</div>
- <div class='line'>Of how deprav’d a quality——O Regan!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Regan.</em> I pray you, sir, take patience; I have hope</div>
- <div class='line'>You less know how to value her desert,</div>
- <div class='line'>Than she to scant her duty.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Lear.</em> Say, how is that?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Regan.</em> I cannot think my sister in the least</div>
- <div class='line'>Would fail her obligation; if, sir, perchance,</div>
- <div class='line'>She have restrain’d the riots of your followers,</div>
- <div class='line'>’Tis on such ground, and to such wholesome end,</div>
- <div class='line'>As clears her from all blame.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Lear.</em> My curses on her!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Regan.</em> O, sir, you are old;</div>
- <div class='line'>Nature in you stands on the very verge</div>
- <div class='line'>Of her confine: you should be rul’d, and led</div>
- <div class='line'>By some discretion, that discerns your state</div>
- <div class='line'>Better than you yourself: therefore, I pray you,</div>
- <div class='line'>That to our sister you do make return;</div>
- <div class='line'>Say, you have wrong’d her, sir.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Lear.</em> Ask her forgiveness?</div>
- <div class='line'>Do you but mark how this becomes the use?</div>
- <div class='line'><em>Dear daughter, I confess that I am old</em>;</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_265'>265</span><em>Age is unnecessary; on my knees I beg,</em></div>
- <div class='line'><em>That you’ll vouchsafe me raiment, bed, and food.</em></div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Regan.</em> Good sir, no more; these are unsightly tricks:</div>
- <div class='line'>Return you to my sister.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Lear.</em> Never, Regan:</div>
- <div class='line'>She hath abated me of half my train;</div>
- <div class='line'>Look’d blank upon me; struck me with her tongue,</div>
- <div class='line'>Most serpent-like, upon the very heart:——</div>
- <div class='line'>All the stor’d vengeances of heaven fall</div>
- <div class='line'>On her ungrateful top! Strike her young bones,</div>
- <div class='line'>You taking airs, with lameness!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Cornwall.</em> Fie, sir, fie!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Lear.</em> You nimble lightnings, dart your blinding flames</div>
- <div class='line'>Into her scornful eyes! Infect her beauty,</div>
- <div class='line'>You fen-suck’d fogs, drawn by the powerful sun,</div>
- <div class='line'>To fall, and blast her pride!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Regan.</em> O the blest gods!</div>
- <div class='line'>So will you wish on me, when the rash mood is on.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Lear.</em> No, Regan, thou shalt never have my curse;</div>
- <div class='line'>Thy tender-hefted nature shall not give</div>
- <div class='line'>Thee o’er to harshness; her eyes are fierce, but thine</div>
- <div class='line'>Do comfort, and not burn: ’Tis not in thee</div>
- <div class='line'>To grudge my pleasures, to cut off my train,</div>
- <div class='line'>To bandy hasty words, to scant my sizes,</div>
- <div class='line'>And, in conclusion, to oppose the bolt</div>
- <div class='line'>Against my coming in: thou better know’st</div>
- <div class='line'>The offices of nature, bond of childhood,</div>
- <div class='line'>Effects of courtesy, dues of gratitude;</div>
- <div class='line'>Thy half o’ the kingdom thou hast not forgot,</div>
- <div class='line'>Wherein I thee endow’d.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Regan.</em> Good sir, to the purpose. <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>[<em>Trumpets within.</em><span class='hidev'>|</span></span></div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Lear.</em> Who put my man i’ the stocks?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Cornwall.</em> What trumpet’s that?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in20'><em>Enter Steward.</em></div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Regan.</em> I know’t, my sister’s: this approves her letter,</div>
- <div class='line'>That she would soon be here.—Is your lady come?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Lear.</em> This is a slave, whose easy-borrow’d pride</div>
- <div class='line'>Dwells in the fickle grace of her he follows:——</div>
- <div class='line'>Out, Varlet, from my sight!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Cornwall.</em> What means your grace?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Lear.</em> Who stock’d my servant? Regan, I have good hope</div>
- <div class='line'>Thou did’st not know on’t.——Who comes here? O heavens,</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in16'><em>Enter</em> <span class='sc'>Gonerill</span>.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>If you do love old men, if your sweet sway</div>
- <div class='line'>Allow obedience, if yourselves are old,</div>
- <div class='line'>Make it your cause; send down, and take my part!—</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_266'>266</span>Art not asham’d to look upon this beard?— <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>[<em>To Gonerill.</em><span class='hidev'>|</span></span></div>
- <div class='line'>O, Regan, wilt thou take her by the hand?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Gonerill.</em> Why not by the hand, sir? How have I offended?</div>
- <div class='line'>All’s not offence, that indiscretion finds,</div>
- <div class='line'>And dotage terms so.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Lear.</em> O, sides, you are too tough!</div>
- <div class='line'>Will you yet hold?—How came my man i’ the stocks?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Cornwall.</em> I set him there, sir: but his own disorders</div>
- <div class='line'>Deserv’d much less advancement.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Lear.</em> You! did you?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Regan.</em> I pray you, father, being weak, seem so.</div>
- <div class='line'>If, till the expiration of your month,</div>
- <div class='line'>You will return and sojourn with my sister,</div>
- <div class='line'>Dismissing half your train, come then to me;</div>
- <div class='line'>I am now from home, and out of that provision</div>
- <div class='line'>Which shall be needful for your entertainment.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Lear.</em> Return to her, and fifty men dismiss’d?</div>
- <div class='line'>No, rather I abjure all roofs, and choose</div>
- <div class='line'>To be a comrade with the wolf and owl——</div>
- <div class='line'>To wage against the enmity o’ the air,</div>
- <div class='line'>Necessity’s sharp pinch!——Return with her!</div>
- <div class='line'>Why, the hot-blooded France, that dowerless took</div>
- <div class='line'>Our youngest born, I could as well be brought</div>
- <div class='line'>To knee his throne, and squire-like pension beg</div>
- <div class='line'>To keep base life afoot.——Return with her!</div>
- <div class='line'>Persuade me rather to be slave and sumpter</div>
- <div class='line'>To this detested groom. <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>[<em>Looking on the Steward.</em><span class='hidev'>|</span></span></div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Gonerill.</em> At your choice, sir.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Lear.</em> Now, I pr’ythee, daughter, do not make me mad;</div>
- <div class='line'>I will not trouble thee, my child; farewell:</div>
- <div class='line'>We’ll no more meet, no more see one another:——</div>
- <div class='line'>But yet thou art my flesh, my blood, my daughter;</div>
- <div class='line'>Or, rather, a disease that’s in my flesh,</div>
- <div class='line'>Which I must needs call mine: thou art a bile,</div>
- <div class='line'>A plague-sore, an embossed carbuncle,</div>
- <div class='line'>In my corrupted blood. But I’ll not chide thee;</div>
- <div class='line'>Let shame come when it will, I do not call it:</div>
- <div class='line'>I did not bid the thunder-bearer shoot,</div>
- <div class='line'>Nor tell tales of thee to high-judging Jove:</div>
- <div class='line'>Mend when thou canst; be better, at thy leisure:</div>
- <div class='line'>I can be patient; I can stay with Regan,</div>
- <div class='line'>I, and my hundred knights.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Regan.</em> Not altogether so, sir;</div>
- <div class='line'>I look’d not for you yet, nor am provided</div>
- <div class='line'>For your fit welcome: Give ear, sir, to my sister;</div>
- <div class='line'>For those that mingle reason with your passion</div>
- <div class='line'>Must be content to think you old, and so——</div>
- <div class='line'>But she knows what she does.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Lear.</em> Is this well spoken now?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_267'>267</span><em>Regan.</em> I dare avouch it, sir: What, fifty followers?</div>
- <div class='line'>Is it not well? What should you need of more?</div>
- <div class='line'>Yea, or so many? Sith that both charge and danger</div>
- <div class='line'>Speak ‘gainst so great a number? How, in one house,</div>
- <div class='line'>Should many people, under two commands,</div>
- <div class='line'>Hold amity? ’Tis hard; almost impossible.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Gonerill.</em> Why might not you, my lord, receive attendance</div>
- <div class='line'>From those that she calls servants, or from mine?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Regan.</em> Why not, my lord? If then they chanc’d to slack you,</div>
- <div class='line'>We would controul them: if you will come to me</div>
- <div class='line'>(For now I spy a danger) I entreat you</div>
- <div class='line'>To bring but five-and-twenty; to no more</div>
- <div class='line'>Will I give place, or notice.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Lear.</em> I gave you all——</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Regan.</em> And in good time you gave it.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Lear.</em> Made you my guardians, my depositaries;</div>
- <div class='line'>But kept a reservation to be follow’d</div>
- <div class='line'>With such a number: what, must I come to you</div>
- <div class='line'>With five-and-twenty, Regan! said you so?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Regan.</em> And speak it again, my lord: no more with me.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Lear.</em> Those wicked creatures yet do look well-favour’d,</div>
- <div class='line'>When others are more wicked; not being the worst,</div>
- <div class='line'>Stands in some rank of praise:——I’ll go with thee; <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>[<em>To Gonerill.</em><span class='hidev'>|</span></span></div>
- <div class='line'>Thy fifty yet doth double five-and-twenty,</div>
- <div class='line'>And thou art twice her love.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Gonerill.</em> Hear me, my lord;</div>
- <div class='line'>What need you five-and-twenty, ten, or five,</div>
- <div class='line'>To follow in a house, where twice so many</div>
- <div class='line'>Have a command to tend you?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Regan.</em> What need one?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Lear.</em> O, reason not the need: our basest beggars</div>
- <div class='line'>Are in the poorest thing superfluous:</div>
- <div class='line'>Allow not nature more than nature needs,</div>
- <div class='line'>Man’s life is cheap as beast’s: thou art a lady;</div>
- <div class='line'>If only to go warm were gorgeous,</div>
- <div class='line'>Why, nature needs not what thou gorgeous wear’st;</div>
- <div class='line'>Which scarcely keeps thee warm.——But, for true need——</div>
- <div class='line'>You heavens, give me that patience which I need!</div>
- <div class='line'>You see me here, you gods; a poor old man,</div>
- <div class='line'>As full of grief as age; wretched in both!</div>
- <div class='line'>If it be you that stir these daughters’ hearts</div>
- <div class='line'>Against their father, fool me not so much</div>
- <div class='line'>To bear it tamely; touch me with noble anger!</div>
- <div class='line'>O, let no woman’s weapons, water-drops,</div>
- <div class='line'>Stain my man’s cheeks!——No, you unnatural hags,</div>
- <div class='line'>I will have such revenges on you both,</div>
- <div class='line'>That all the world shall——I will do such things——</div>
- <div class='line'>What they are, yet I know not; but they shall be</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_268'>268</span>The terrors of the earth. You think, I’ll weep:</div>
- <div class='line'>No, I’ll not weep:——</div>
- <div class='line'>I have full cause of weeping; but this heart</div>
- <div class='line'>Shall break into a hundred thousand flaws,</div>
- <div class='line'>Or e’er I’ll weep:——O, fool, I shall go mad!——</div>
- <div class='line in27'><span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>[<em>Exeunt Lear, Gloster, Kent, and Fool.</em>’<span class='hidev'>|</span></span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>If there is any thing in any author like this yearning of the heart,
-these throes of tenderness, this profound expression of all that can
-be thought and felt in the most heart-rending situations, we are glad
-of it; but it is in some author that we have not read.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The scene in the storm, where he is exposed to all the fury of
-the elements, though grand and terrible, is not so fine, but the moralising
-scenes with Mad Tom, Kent, and Gloster, are upon a par with
-the former. His exclamation in the supposed trial-scene of his
-daughters, ‘See the little dogs and all, Tray, Blanch, and Sweetheart,
-see they bark at me,’ his issuing his orders, ‘Let them anatomize
-Regan, see what breeds about her heart,’ and his reflection
-when he sees the misery of Edgar, ‘Nothing but his unkind daughters
-could have brought him to this,’ are in a style of pathos, where the
-extremest resources of the imagination are called in to lay open the
-deepest movements of the heart, which was peculiar to Shakespear.
-In the same style and spirit is his interrupting the Fool who asks
-‘whether a madman be a gentleman or a yeoman,’ by answering
-‘A king, a king.—</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The indirect part that Gloster takes in these scenes where his
-generosity leads him to relieve Lear and resent the cruelty of his
-daughters, at the very time that he is himself instigated to seek the
-life of his son, and suffering under the sting of his supposed ingratitude,
-is a striking accompaniment to the situation of Lear. Indeed,
-the manner in which the threads of the story are woven together
-is almost as wonderful in the way of art as the carrying on the tide
-of passion, still varying and unimpaired, is on the score of nature.
-Among the remarkable instances of this kind are Edgar’s meeting
-with his old blind father; the deception he practises upon him when
-he pretends to lead him to the top of Dover-cliff—‘Come on, sir,
-here’s the place,’ to prevent his ending his life and miseries together;
-his encounter with the perfidious Steward whom he kills, and his
-finding the letter from Gonerill to his brother upon him which leads
-to the final catastrophe, and brings the wheel of Justice ‘full circle
-home’ to the guilty parties. The bustle and rapid succession of
-events in the last scenes is surprising. But the meeting between Lear
-and Cordelia is by far the most affecting part of them. It has all
-the wildness of poetry, and all the heart-felt truth of nature. The
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_269'>269</span>previous account of her reception of the news of his unkind treatment,
-her involuntary reproaches to her sisters, ‘Shame, ladies,
-shame,’ Lear’s backwardness to see his daughter, the picture of the
-desolate state to which he is reduced, ‘Alack, ’tis he; why he was
-met even now, as mad as the vex’d sea, singing aloud,’ only prepare
-the way for and heighten our expectation of what follows, and
-assuredly this expectation is not disappointed when through the
-tender care of Cordelia he revives and recollects her.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Cordelia.</em> How does my royal lord? How fares your majesty!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Lear.</em> You do me wrong, to take me out o’ the grave:</div>
- <div class='line'>Thou art a soul in bliss; but I am bound</div>
- <div class='line'>Upon a wheel of fire, that mine own tears</div>
- <div class='line'>Do scald like molten lead.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Cordelia.</em> Sir, do you know me?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Lear.</em> You are a spirit I know: when did you die?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Cordelia.</em> Still, still, far wide!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Physician.</em> He’s scarce awake; let him alone awhile.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Lear.</em> Where have I been? Where am I?—Fair daylight?——</div>
- <div class='line'>I am mightily abus’d.—I should even die with pity,</div>
- <div class='line'>To see another thus.—I know not what to say.——</div>
- <div class='line'>I will not swear these are my hands:—let’s see;</div>
- <div class='line'>I feel this pin prick. ‘Would I were assured</div>
- <div class='line'>Of my condition.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Cordelia.</em> O, look upon me, sir,</div>
- <div class='line'>And hold your hands in benediction o’er me:——</div>
- <div class='line'>No, sir, you must not kneel.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Lear.</em> Pray, do not mock me:</div>
- <div class='line'>I am a very foolish fond old man,</div>
- <div class='line'>Fourscore and upward;</div>
- <div class='line'>And, to deal plainly,</div>
- <div class='line'>I fear, I am not in my perfect mind.</div>
- <div class='line'>Methinks, I shou’d know you, and know this man;</div>
- <div class='line'>Yet I am doubtful: for I am mainly ignorant</div>
- <div class='line'>What place this is; and all the skill I have</div>
- <div class='line'>Remembers not these garments; nor I know not</div>
- <div class='line'>Where I did lodge last night: do not laugh at me;</div>
- <div class='line'>For, as I am a man, I think this lady</div>
- <div class='line'>To be my child Cordelia.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Cordelia.</em> And so I am, I am!’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Almost equal to this in awful beauty is their consolation of each
-other when, after the triumph of their enemies, they are led to prison.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Cordelia.</em> We are not the first,</div>
- <div class='line'>Who, with best meaning, have incurr’d the worst.</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_270'>270</span>For thee, oppressed king, am I cast down;</div>
- <div class='line'>Myself could else out-frown false fortune’s frown.—</div>
- <div class='line'>Shall we not see these daughters, and these sisters?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Lear.</em> No, no, no, no! Come, let’s away to prison:</div>
- <div class='line'>We two alone will sing like birds i’ the cage:</div>
- <div class='line'>When thou dost ask me blessing, I’ll kneel down,</div>
- <div class='line'>And ask of thee forgiveness: so we’ll live,</div>
- <div class='line'>And pray, and sing, and tell old tales, and laugh</div>
- <div class='line'>At gilded butterflies, and hear poor rogues</div>
- <div class='line'>Talk of court news; and we’ll talk with them too—</div>
- <div class='line'>Who loses, and who wins; who’s in, who’s out;—</div>
- <div class='line'>And take upon us the mystery of things,</div>
- <div class='line'>As if we were God’s spies: and we’ll wear out,</div>
- <div class='line'>In a wall’d prison, packs and sects of great ones,</div>
- <div class='line'>That ebb and flow by the moon.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Edmund.</em> Take them away.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Lear.</em> Upon such sacrifices, my Cordelia,</div>
- <div class='line'>The gods themselves throw incense.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The concluding events are sad, painfully sad; but their pathos is
-extreme. The oppression of the feelings is relieved by the very
-interest we take in the misfortunes of others, and by the reflections
-to which they give birth. Cordelia is hanged in prison by the orders
-of the bastard Edmund, which are known too late to be countermanded,
-and Lear dies broken-hearted, lamenting over her.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Lear.</em> And my poor fool is hang’d! No, no, no life:</div>
- <div class='line'>Why should a dog, a horse, a rat, have life,</div>
- <div class='line'>And thou no breath at all? O, thou wilt come no more,</div>
- <div class='line'>Never, never, never, never, never!——</div>
- <div class='line'>Pray you, undo this button: thank you, sir.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>He dies, and indeed we feel the truth of what Kent says on the
-occasion—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Vex not his ghost: O, let him pass! he hates him,</div>
- <div class='line'>That would upon the rack of this rough world</div>
- <div class='line'>Stretch him out longer.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Yet a happy ending has been contrived for this play, which is
-approved of by Dr. Johnson and condemned by Schlegel. A better
-authority than either, on any subject in which poetry and feeling are
-concerned, has given it in favour of Shakespear, in some remarks on
-the acting of Lear, with which we shall conclude this account:</p>
-
-<p class='c016'>‘The <span class='sc'>Lear</span> of Shakespear cannot be acted. The contemptible machinery
-with which they mimic the storm which he goes out in, is not more
-inadequate to represent the horrors of the real elements than any actor can
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_271'>271</span>be to represent Lear. The greatness of Lear is not in corporal dimension,
-but in intellectual; the explosions of his passions are terrible as a volcano:
-they are storms turning up and disclosing to the bottom that rich sea, his
-mind, with all its vast riches. It is his mind which is laid bare. This
-case of flesh and blood seems too insignificant to be thought on; even as
-he himself neglects it. On the stage we see nothing but corporal infirmities
-and weakness, the impotence of rage—while we read it, we see not Lear,
-but we are Lear;—we are in his mind; we are sustained by a grandeur,
-which baffles the malice of daughters and storms; in the aberrations of
-his reason, we discover a mighty irregular power of reasoning, immethodised
-from the ordinary purposes of life, but exerting its powers, as the wind
-blows where it listeth, at will on the corruptions and abuses of mankind.
-What have looks or tones to do with that sublime identification of his age
-with that of <em>the heavens themselves</em>, when in his reproaches to them for
-conniving at the injustice of his children, he reminds them that “they
-themselves are old!” What gesture shall we appropriate to this? What
-has the voice or the eye to do with such things? But the play is beyond
-all art, as the tamperings with it shew: it is too hard and stony: it must
-have love-scenes, and a happy ending. It is not enough that Cordelia
-is a daughter, she must shine as a lover too. Tate has put his hook in the
-nostrils of this Leviathan, for Garrick and his followers, the shew-men of
-the scene, to draw it about more easily. A happy ending!—as if the
-living martyrdom that Lear had gone through,—the flaying of his feelings
-alive, did not make a fair dismissal from the stage of life the only decorous
-thing for him. If he is to live and be happy after, if he could sustain this
-world’s burden after, why all this pudder and preparation—why torment
-us with all this unnecessary sympathy? As if the childish pleasure of
-getting his gilt robes and sceptre again could tempt him to act over again
-his misused station,—as if at his years and with his experience, any thing
-was left but to die.’<a id='r68' /><a href='#f68' class='c012'><sup>[68]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Four things have struck us in reading <span class='sc'>Lear</span>:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>1. That poetry is an interesting study, for this reason, that it
-relates to whatever is most interesting in human life. Whoever
-therefore has a contempt for poetry, has a contempt for himself and
-humanity.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>2. That the language of poetry is superior to the language of
-painting; because the strongest of our recollections relate to feelings,
-not to faces.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>3. That the greatest strength of genius is shewn in describing the
-strongest passions: for the power of the imagination, in works of
-invention, must be in proportion to the force of the natural impressions,
-which are the subject of them.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>4. That the circumstance which balances the pleasure against the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_272'>272</span>pain in tragedy is, that in proportion to the greatness of the evil, is
-our sense and desire of the opposite good excited; and that our
-sympathy with actual suffering is lost in the strong impulse given to
-our natural affections, and carried away with the swelling tide of
-passion, that gushes from and relieves the heart.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>RICHARD II.</h3>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='sc'>Richard II.</span> is a play little known compared with <cite>Richard III.</cite>
-which last is a play that every unfledged candidate for theatrical fame
-chuses to strut and fret his hour upon the stage in; yet we confess
-that we prefer the nature and feeling of the one to the noise and
-bustle of the other; at least, as we are so often forced to see it acted.
-In <span class='sc'>Richard II.</span> the weakness of the king leaves us leisure to take a
-greater interest in the misfortunes of the man. After the first act,
-in which the arbitrariness of his behaviour only proves his want of
-resolution, we see him staggering under the unlooked-for blows of
-fortune, bewailing his loss of kingly power, not preventing it, sinking
-under the aspiring genius of Bolingbroke, his authority trampled on,
-his hopes failing him, and his pride crushed and broken down under
-insults and injuries, which his own misconduct had provoked, but
-which he has not courage or manliness to resent. The change of
-tone and behaviour in the two competitors for the throne according
-to their change of fortune, from the capricious sentence of banishment
-passed by Richard upon Bolingbroke, the suppliant offers and modest
-pretensions of the latter on his return to the high and haughty tone
-with which he accepts Richard’s resignation of the crown after the
-loss of all his power, the use which he makes of the deposed king
-to grace his triumphal progress through the streets of London, and
-the final intimation of his wish for his death, which immediately finds
-a servile executioner, is marked throughout with complete effect and
-without the slightest appearance of effort. The steps by which
-Bolingbroke mounts the throne are those by which Richard sinks
-into the grave. We feel neither respect nor love for the deposed
-monarch; for he is as wanting in energy as in principle: but we pity
-him, for he pities himself. His heart is by no means hardened
-against himself, but bleeds afresh at every new stroke of mischance,
-and his sensibility, absorbed in his own person, and unused to misfortune,
-is not only tenderly alive to its own sufferings, but without
-the fortitude to bear them. He is, however, human in his distresses;
-for to feel pain, and sorrow, weakness, disappointment, remorse and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_273'>273</span>anguish, is the lot of humanity, and we sympathize with him accordingly.
-The sufferings of the man make us forget that he ever was
-a king.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The right assumed by sovereign power to trifle at its will with the
-happiness of others as a matter of course, or to remit its exercise as
-a matter of favour, is strikingly shewn in the sentence of banishment
-so unjustly pronounced on Bolingbroke and Mowbray, and in what
-Bolingbroke says when four years of his banishment are taken off,
-with as little reason.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘How long a time lies in one little word!</div>
- <div class='line'>Four lagging winters and four wanton springs</div>
- <div class='line'>End in a word: such is the breath of kings.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>A more affecting image of the loneliness of a state of exile can
-hardly be given than by what Bolingbroke afterwards observes of his
-having ‘sighed his English breath in foreign clouds’; or than that
-conveyed in Mowbray’s complaint at being banished for life.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘The language I have learned these forty years,</div>
- <div class='line'>My native English, now I must forego;</div>
- <div class='line'>And now my tongue’s use is to me no more</div>
- <div class='line'>Than an unstringed viol or a harp,</div>
- <div class='line'>Or like a cunning instrument cas’d up,</div>
- <div class='line'>Or being open, put into his hands</div>
- <div class='line'>That knows no touch to tune the harmony.</div>
- <div class='line'>I am too old to fawn upon a nurse,</div>
- <div class='line'>Too far in years to be a pupil now.’—</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>How very beautiful is all this, and at the same time how very
-<em>English</em> too!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='sc'>Richard II.</span> may be considered as the first of that series of English
-historical plays, in which ‘is hung armour of the invincible knights
-of old,’ in which their hearts seem to strike against their coats
-of mail, where their blood tingles for the fight, and words are but
-the harbingers of blows. Of this state of accomplished barbarism
-the appeal of Bolingbroke and Mowbray is an admirable specimen.
-Another of these ‘keen encounters of their wits,’ which serve to
-whet the talkers’ swords, is where Aumerle answers in the presence
-of Bolingbroke to the charge which Bagot brings against him of being
-an accessory in Gloster’s death.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Fitzwater.</em> If that thy valour stand on sympathies,</div>
- <div class='line'>There is my gage, Aumerle, in gage to thine;</div>
- <div class='line'>By that fair sun that shows me where thou stand’st,</div>
- <div class='line'>I heard thee say, and vauntingly thou spak’st it,</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_274'>274</span>That thou wert cause of noble Gloster’s death.</div>
- <div class='line'>If thou deny’st it twenty times thou liest,</div>
- <div class='line'>And I will turn thy falsehood to thy heart</div>
- <div class='line'>Where it was forged, with my rapier’s point.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Aumerle.</em> Thou dar’st not, coward, live to see the day.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Fitzwater.</em> Now, by my soul, I would it were this hour.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Aumerle.</em> Fitzwater, thou art damn’d to hell for this.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Percy.</em> Aumerle, thou liest; his honour is as true,</div>
- <div class='line'>In this appeal, as thou art all unjust;</div>
- <div class='line'>And that thou art so, there I throw my gage</div>
- <div class='line'>To prove it on thee, to the extremest point</div>
- <div class='line'>Of mortal breathing. Seize it, if thou dar’st.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Aumerle.</em> And if I do not, may my hands rot off,</div>
- <div class='line'>And never brandish more revengeful steel</div>
- <div class='line'>Over the glittering helmet of my foe.</div>
- <div class='line'>Who sets me else? By heav’n, I’ll throw at all.</div>
- <div class='line'>I have a thousand spirits in my breast,</div>
- <div class='line'>To answer twenty thousand such as you.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Surry.</em> My lord Fitzwater, I remember well</div>
- <div class='line'>The very time Aumerle and you did talk.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Fitzwater.</em> My lord, ’tis true: you were in presence then:</div>
- <div class='line'>And you can witness with me, this is true.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Surry.</em> As false, by heav’n, as heav’n itself is true.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Fitzwater.</em> Surry, thou liest.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Surry.</em> Dishonourable boy,</div>
- <div class='line'>That lie shall lye so heavy on my sword,</div>
- <div class='line'>That it shall render vengeance and revenge,</div>
- <div class='line'>Till thou the lie-giver and that lie rest</div>
- <div class='line'>In earth as quiet as thy father’s skull.</div>
- <div class='line'>In proof whereof, there is mine honour’s pawn:</div>
- <div class='line'>Engage it to the trial, if thou dar’st.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Fitzwater.</em> How fondly dost thou spur a forward horse:</div>
- <div class='line'>If I dare eat or drink, or breathe or live,</div>
- <div class='line'>I dare meet Surry in a wilderness,</div>
- <div class='line'>And spit upon him, whilst I say he lies,</div>
- <div class='line'>And lies, and lies: there is my bond of faith,</div>
- <div class='line'>To tie thee to thy strong correction.</div>
- <div class='line'>As I do hope to thrive in this new world,</div>
- <div class='line'>Aumerle is guilty of my true appeal.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The truth is, that there is neither truth nor honour in all these
-noble persons: they answer words with words, as they do blows
-with blows, in mere self defence: nor have they any principle
-whatever but that of courage in maintaining any wrong they dare
-commit, or any falsehood which they find it useful to assert. How
-different were these noble knights and ‘barons bold’ from their more
-refined descendants in the present day, who, instead of deciding
-questions of right by brute force, refer everything to convenience,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_275'>275</span>fashion, and good breeding! In point of any abstract love of truth
-or justice, they are just the same now that they were then.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The characters of old John of Gaunt and of his brother York,
-uncles to the King, the one stern and foreboding, the other honest,
-good-natured, doing all for the best, and therefore doing nothing,
-are well kept up. The speech of the former, in praise of England,
-is one of the most eloquent that ever was penned. We should
-perhaps hardly be disposed to feed the pampered egotism of our
-countrymen by quoting this description, were it not that the conclusion
-of it (which looks prophetic) may qualify any improper
-degree of exultation.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘This royal throne of kings, this sceptered isle,</div>
- <div class='line'>This earth of Majesty, this seat of Mars,</div>
- <div class='line'>This other Eden, demi-Paradise,</div>
- <div class='line'>This fortress built by nature for herself</div>
- <div class='line'>Against infection and the hand of war;</div>
- <div class='line'>This happy breed of men, this little world,</div>
- <div class='line'>This precious stone set in the silver sea,</div>
- <div class='line'>Which serves it in the office of a wall,</div>
- <div class='line'>Or as a moat defensive to a house</div>
- <div class='line'>Against the envy of less happy lands:</div>
- <div class='line'>This blessed plot, this earth, this realm, this England,</div>
- <div class='line'>This nurse, this teeming womb of royal kings,</div>
- <div class='line'>Fear’d for their breed and famous for their birth,</div>
- <div class='line'>Renowned for their deeds as far from home,</div>
- <div class='line'>(For Christian service and true chivalry)</div>
- <div class='line'>As is the sepulchre in stubborn Jewry</div>
- <div class='line'>Of the world’s ransom, blessed Mary’s son;</div>
- <div class='line'>This land of such dear souls, this dear dear land,</div>
- <div class='line'>Dear for her reputation through the world,</div>
- <div class='line'>Is now leas’d out (I die pronouncing it)</div>
- <div class='line'>Like to a tenement or pelting farm.</div>
- <div class='line'>England bound in with the triumphant sea,</div>
- <div class='line'>Whose rocky shore beats back the envious surge</div>
- <div class='line'>Of wat’ry Neptune, is bound in with shame,</div>
- <div class='line'>With inky-blots and rotten parchment bonds.</div>
- <div class='line'>That England that was wont to conquer others,</div>
- <div class='line'>Hath made a shameful conquest of itself.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The character of Bolingbroke, afterwards Henry <span class='fss'>IV.</span> is drawn
-with a masterly hand:—patient for occasion, and then steadily availing
-himself of it, seeing his advantage afar off, but only seizing on it
-when he has it within his reach, humble, crafty, bold, and aspiring,
-encroaching by regular but slow degrees, building power on opinion,
-and cementing opinion by power. His disposition is first unfolded
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_276'>276</span>by Richard himself, who however is too self-willed and secure to
-make a proper use of his knowledge.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Ourself and Bushy, Bagot here and Green,</div>
- <div class='line'>Observed his courtship of the common people:</div>
- <div class='line'>How he did seem to dive into their hearts,</div>
- <div class='line'>With humble and familiar courtesy,</div>
- <div class='line'>What reverence he did throw away on slaves;</div>
- <div class='line'>Wooing poor craftsmen with the craft of smiles,</div>
- <div class='line'>And patient under-bearing of his fortune,</div>
- <div class='line'>As ‘twere to banish their affections with him.</div>
- <div class='line'>Off goes his bonnet to an oyster-wench;</div>
- <div class='line'>A brace of draymen bid God speed him well,</div>
- <div class='line'>And had the tribute of his supple knee,</div>
- <div class='line'>With thanks my countrymen, my loving friends;</div>
- <div class='line'>As were our England in reversion his,</div>
- <div class='line'>And he our subjects’ next degree in hope.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Afterwards, he gives his own character to Percy, in these words:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘I thank thee, gentle Percy, and be sure</div>
- <div class='line'>I count myself in nothing else so happy,</div>
- <div class='line'>As in a soul rememb’ring my good friends;</div>
- <div class='line'>And as my fortune ripens with thy love,</div>
- <div class='line'>It shall be still thy true love’s recompense.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>We know how he afterwards kept his promise. His bold assertion
-of his own rights, his pretended submission to the king, and the
-ascendancy which he tacitly assumes over him without openly claiming
-it, as soon as he has him in his power, are characteristic traits
-of this ambitious and politic usurper. But the part of Richard
-himself gives the chief interest to the play. His folly, his vices, his
-misfortunes, his reluctance to part with the crown, his fear to keep
-it, his weak and womanish regrets, his starting tears, his fits of hectic
-passion, his smothered majesty, pass in succession before us, and make
-a picture as natural as it is affecting. Among the most striking
-touches of pathos are his wish ‘O that I were a mockery king of
-snow to melt away before the sun of Bolingbroke,’ and the incident
-of the poor groom who comes to visit him in prison, and tells him
-how ‘it yearned his heart that Bolingbroke upon his coronation-day
-rode on Roan Barbary.’ We shall have occasion to return hereafter
-to the character of Richard <span class='fss'>II.</span> in speaking of Henry <span class='fss'>VI.</span> There is
-only one passage more, the description of his entrance into London
-with Bolingbroke, which we should like to quote here, if it had not
-been so used and worn out, so thumbed and got by rote, so praised
-and painted; but its beauty surmounts all these considerations.</p>
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_277'>277</span>‘<em>Duchess.</em> My lord, you told me you would tell the rest,</div>
- <div class='line'>When weeping made you break the story off</div>
- <div class='line'>Of our two cousins coming into London.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>York.</em> Where did I leave?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Duchess.</em> At that sad stop, my lord,</div>
- <div class='line'>Where rude misgovern’d hands, from window tops,</div>
- <div class='line'>Threw dust and rubbish on king Richard’s head.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>York.</em> Then, as I said, the duke, great Bolingbroke,</div>
- <div class='line'>Mounted upon a hot and fiery steed,</div>
- <div class='line'>Which his aspiring rider seem’d to know,</div>
- <div class='line'>With slow, but stately pace, kept on his course,</div>
- <div class='line'>While all tongues cried—God save thee, Bolingbroke!</div>
- <div class='line'>You would have thought the very windows spake,</div>
- <div class='line'>So many greedy looks of young and old</div>
- <div class='line'>Through casements darted their desiring eyes</div>
- <div class='line'>Upon his visage; and that all the walls,</div>
- <div class='line'>With painted imag’ry, had said at once—</div>
- <div class='line'>Jesu preserve thee! welcome, Bolingbroke!</div>
- <div class='line'>Whilst he, from one side to the other turning,</div>
- <div class='line'>Bare-headed, lower than his proud steed’s neck,</div>
- <div class='line'>Bespake them thus—I thank you, countrymen:</div>
- <div class='line'>And thus still doing thus he pass’d along.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Duchess.</em> Alas, poor Richard! where rides he the while?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>York.</em> As in a theatre, the eyes of men,</div>
- <div class='line'>After a well-grac’d actor leaves the stage,</div>
- <div class='line'>Are idly bent on him that enters next,</div>
- <div class='line'>Thinking his prattle to be tedious:</div>
- <div class='line'>Even so, or with much more contempt, men’s eyes</div>
- <div class='line'>Did scowl on Richard; no man cried God save him!</div>
- <div class='line'>No joyful tongue gave him his welcome home:</div>
- <div class='line'>But dust was thrown upon his sacred head!</div>
- <div class='line'>Which with such gentle sorrow he shook off—</div>
- <div class='line'>His face still combating with tears and smiles,</div>
- <div class='line'>The badges of his grief and patience—</div>
- <div class='line'>That had not God, for some strong purpose, steel’d</div>
- <div class='line'>The hearts of men, they must perforce have melted,</div>
- <div class='line'>And barbarism itself have pitied him.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>HENRY IV<br /> <span class='c020'>IN TWO PARTS</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>If Shakespear’s fondness for the ludicrous sometimes led to faults in
-his tragedies (which was not often the case) he has made us amends
-by the character of Falstaff. This is perhaps the most substantial
-comic character that ever was invented. Sir John carries a most
-portly presence in the mind’s eye; and in him, not to speak it
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_278'>278</span>profanely, ‘we behold the fulness of the spirit of wit and humour
-bodily.’ We are as well acquainted with his person as his mind,
-and his jokes come upon us with double force and relish from the
-quantity of flesh through which they make their way, as he shakes
-his fat sides with laughter, or ‘lards the lean earth as he walks along.’
-Other comic characters seem, if we approach and handle them, to
-resolve themselves into air, ‘into thin air’; but this is embodied and
-palpable to the grossest apprehension: it lies ‘three fingers deep upon
-the ribs,’ it plays about the lungs and the diaphragm with all the force
-of animal enjoyment. His body is like a good estate to his mind,
-from which he receives rents and revenues of profit and pleasure in
-kind, according to its extent, and the richness of the soil. Wit is
-often a meagre substitute for pleasurable sensation; an effusion of
-spleen and petty spite at the comforts of others, from feeling none in
-itself. Falstaff’s wit is an emanation of a fine constitution; an
-exuberance of good-humour and good-nature; an overflowing of his
-love of laughter and good-fellowship; a giving vent to his heart’s
-ease, and over-contentment with himself and others. He would not
-be in character, if he were not so fat as he is; for there is the
-greatest keeping in the boundless luxury of his imagination and the
-pampered self-indulgence of his physical appetites. He manures and
-nourishes his mind with jests, as he does his body with sack and
-sugar. He carves out his jokes, as he would a capon or a haunch
-of venison, where there is <em>cut and come again</em>; and pours out upon
-them the oil of gladness. His tongue drops fatness, and in the
-chambers of his brain ‘it snows of meat and drink.’ He keeps
-up perpetual holiday and open house, and we live with him in a
-round of invitations to a rump and dozen.—Yet we are not to suppose
-that he was a mere sensualist. All this is as much in imagination
-as in reality. His sensuality does not engross and stupify his other
-faculties, but ‘ascends me into the brain, clears away all the dull,
-crude vapours that environ it, and makes it full of nimble, fiery, and
-delectable shapes.’ His imagination keeps up the ball after his senses
-have done with it. He seems to have even a greater enjoyment of
-the freedom from restraint, of good cheer, of his ease, of his vanity,
-in the ideal exaggerated description which he gives of them, than
-in fact. He never fails to enrich his discourse with allusions to
-eating and drinking, but we never see him at table. He carries his
-own larder about with him, and he is himself ‘a tun of man.’ His
-pulling out the bottle in the field of battle is a joke to shew his
-contempt for glory accompanied with danger, his systematic adherence
-to his Epicurean philosophy in the most trying circumstances.
-Again, such is his deliberate exaggeration of his own vices, that it
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_279'>279</span>does not seem quite certain whether the account of his hostess’s bill,
-found in his pocket, with such an out-of-the-way charge for capons
-and sack with only one halfpenny-worth of bread, was not put there
-by himself as a trick to humour the jest upon his favourite propensities,
-and as a conscious caricature of himself. He is represented
-as a liar, a braggart, a coward, a glutton, etc. and yet we are not
-offended but delighted with him; for he is all these as much to
-amuse others as to gratify himself. He openly assumes all these
-characters to shew the humourous part of them. The unrestrained
-indulgence of his own ease, appetites, and convenience, has neither
-malice nor hypocrisy in it. In a word, he is an actor in himself
-almost as much as upon the stage, and we no more object to the
-character of Falstaff in a moral point of view than we should think
-of bringing an excellent comedian, who should represent him to the
-life, before one of the police offices. We only consider the number
-of pleasant lights in which he puts certain foibles (the more pleasant
-as they are opposed to the received rules and necessary restraints of
-society) and do not trouble ourselves about the consequences resulting
-from them, for no mischievous consequences do result. Sir John is
-old as well as fat, which gives a melancholy retrospective tinge to
-the character; and by the disparity between his inclinations and his
-capacity for enjoyment, makes it still more ludicrous and fantastical.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The secret of Falstaff’s wit is for the most part a masterly presence
-of mind, an absolute self-possession, which nothing can disturb. His
-repartees are involuntary suggestions of his self-love; instinctive
-evasions of every thing that threatens to interrupt the career of his
-triumphant jollity and self-complacency. His very size floats him
-out of all his difficulties in a sea of rich conceits; and he turns round
-on the pivot of his convenience, with every occasion and at a moment’s
-warning. His natural repugnance to every unpleasant thought or
-circumstance, of itself makes light of objections, and provokes the
-most extravagant and licentious answers in his own justification.
-His indifference to truth puts no check upon his invention, and the
-more improbable and unexpected his contrivances are, the more
-happily does he seem to be delivered of them, the anticipation of
-their effect acting as a stimulus to the gaiety of his fancy. The
-success of one adventurous sally gives him spirits to undertake another:
-he deals always in round numbers, and his exaggerations and excuses
-are ‘open, palpable, monstrous as the father that begets them.’ His
-dissolute carelessness of what he says discovers itself in the first
-dialogue with the Prince.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'>‘<em>Falstaff.</em> By the lord, thou say’st true, lad; and is not mine hostess
-of the tavern a most sweet wench?</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><span class='pageno' id='Page_280'>280</span><em>P. Henry.</em> As the honey of Hibla, my old lad of the castle; and is not
-a buff-jerkin a most sweet robe of durance?</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Falstaff.</em> How now, how now, mad wag, what in thy quips and thy
-quiddities? what a plague have I to do with a buff-jerkin?</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>P. Henry.</em> Why, what a pox have I to do with mine hostess of the
-tavern?’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the same scene he afterwards affects melancholy, from pure
-satisfaction of heart, and professes reform, because it is the farthest
-thing in the world from his thoughts. He has no qualms of conscience,
-and therefore would as soon talk of them as of anything else when the
-humour takes him.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'>‘<em>Falstaff.</em> But Hal, I pr’ythee trouble me no more with vanity. I would
-to God thou and I knew where a commodity of good names were to be
-bought: an old lord of council rated me the other day in the street about
-you, sir; but I mark’d him not, and yet he talked very wisely, and in the
-street too.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>P. Henry.</em> Thou didst well, for wisdom cries out in the street, and no
-man regards it.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Falstaff.</em> O, thou hast damnable iteration, and art indeed able to corrupt
-a saint. Thou hast done much harm unto me, Hal; God forgive thee for
-it. Before I knew thee, Hal, I knew nothing, and now I am, if a man
-should speak truly, little better than one of the wicked. I must give over
-this life, and I will give it over, by the lord; an I do not, I am a villain.
-I’ll be damn’d for never a king’s son in Christendom.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>P. Henry.</em> Where shall we take a purse to-morrow, Jack?</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Falstaff.</em> Where thou wilt, lad, I’ll make one; an I do not, call me
-villain, and baffle me.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>P. Henry.</em> I see good amendment of life in thee, from praying to purse-taking.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Falstaff.</em> Why, Hal, ’tis my vocation, Hal. ’Tis no sin for a man to
-labour in his vocation.’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Of the other prominent passages, his account of his pretended
-resistance to the robbers, ‘who grew from four men in buckram into
-eleven’ as the imagination of his own valour increased with his relating
-it, his getting off when the truth is discovered by pretending he knew
-the Prince, the scene in which in the person of the old king he
-lectures the prince and gives himself a good character, the soliloquy
-on honour, and description of his new-raised recruits, his meeting with
-the chief justice, his abuse of the Prince and Poins, who overhear him,
-to Doll Tearsheet, his reconciliation with Mrs. Quickly who has
-arrested him for an old debt, and whom he persuades to pawn her
-plate to lend him ten pounds more, and the scenes with Shallow and
-Silence, are all inimitable. Of all of them, the scene in which
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_281'>281</span>Falstaff plays the part, first, of the King, and then of Prince Henry,
-is the one that has been the most often quoted. We must quote it
-once more in illustration of our remarks.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'>‘<em>Falstaff.</em> Harry, I do not only marvel where thou spendest thy time, but also
-how thou art accompanied: for though the camomile, the more it is trodden
-on, the faster it grows, yet youth, the more it is wasted, the sooner it wears.
-That thou art my son, I have partly thy mother’s word, partly my own
-opinion; but chiefly, a villainous trick of thine eye, and a foolish hanging
-of thy nether lip, that doth warrant me. If then thou be son to me, here
-lies the point;——Why, being son to me, art thou so pointed at? Shall
-the blessed sun of heaven prove a micher, and eat blackberries? A question
-not to be ask’d. Shall the son of England prove a thief, and take purses?
-a question not to be ask’d. There is a thing, Harry, which thou hast often
-heard of, and it is known to many in our land by the name of pitch: this
-pitch, as ancient writers do report, doth defile; so doth the company thou
-keepest: for, Harry, now I do not speak to thee in drink, but in tears; not
-in pleasure, but in passion; not in words only, but in woes also:—and yet
-there is a virtuous man, whom I have often noted in thy company, but I
-know not his name.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>P. Henry.</em> What manner of man, an it like your majesty?</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Falstaff.</em> A goodly portly man, i’faith, and a corpulent; of a cheerful
-look, a pleasing eye, and a most noble carriage; and, as I think, his age
-some fifty, or, by’r-lady, inclining to threescore; and now I do remember
-me, his name is Falstaff: if that man should be lewdly given, he deceiveth
-me; for, Harry, I see virtue in his looks. If then the fruit may be known
-by the tree, as the tree by the fruit, then peremptorily I speak it, there is
-virtue in that Falstaff: him keep with, the rest banish. And tell me now,
-thou naughty varlet, tell me, where hast thou been this month?</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>P. Henry.</em> Dost thou speak like a king? Do thou stand for me, and
-I’ll play my father.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Falstaff.</em> Depose me? if thou dost it half so gravely, so majestically, both
-in word and matter, hang me up by the heels for a rabbit-sucker, or a
-poulterer’s hare.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>P. Henry.</em> Well, here I am set.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Falstaff.</em> And here I stand:—judge, my masters.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>P. Henry.</em> Now, Harry, whence come you?</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Falstaff.</em> My noble lord, from Eastcheap.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>P. Henry.</em> The complaints I hear of thee are grievous.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Falstaff.</em> S’blood, my lord, they are false:—nay, I ‘ll tickle ye for a young
-prince, i’faith.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>P. Henry.</em> Swearest thou, ungracious boy? henceforth ne’er look on me.
-Thou art violently carried away from grace: there is a devil haunts thee,
-in the likeness of a fat old man; a tun of man is thy companion. Why
-dost thou converse with that trunk of humours, that bolting-hutch of beastliness,
-that swoln parcel of dropsies, that huge bombard of sack, that stuft
-cloak-bag of guts, that roasted Manning-tree ox with the pudding in his
-belly, that reverend vice, that grey iniquity, that father ruffian, that vanity
-in years? wherein is he good, but to taste sack and drink it? wherein neat
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_282'>282</span>and cleanly, but to carve a capon and eat it? wherein cunning, but in craft?
-wherein crafty, but in villainy? wherein villainous, but in all things? wherein
-worthy, but in nothing?</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Falstaff.</em> I would, your grace would take me with you; whom means
-your grace?</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>P. Henry.</em> That villainous, abominable mis-leader of youth, Falstaff, that
-old white-bearded Satan.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Falstaff.</em> My lord, the man I know.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>P. Henry.</em> I know thou dost.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Falstaff.</em> But to say, I know more harm in him than in myself, were to
-say more than I know. That he is old (the more the pity) his white hairs
-do witness it: but that he is (saving your reverence) a whore-master, that I
-utterly deny. If sack and sugar be a fault, God help the wicked! if to be
-old and merry be a sin, then many an old host that I know is damned: if
-to be fat be to be hated, then Pharaoh’s lean kine are to be loved. No, my
-good lord; banish Peto, banish Bardolph, banish Poins: but for sweet Jack
-Falstaff, kind Jack Falstaff, true Jack Falstaff, valiant Jack Falstaff, and
-therefore more valiant, being as he is, old Jack Falstaff, banish not him thy
-Harry’s company; banish plump Jack, and banish all the world.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>P. Henry.</em> I do, I will.</p>
-
-<div class='c021'>[<em>Knocking; and Hostess and Bardolph go out.</em></div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c013'>
- <div><em>Re-enter</em> <span class='sc'>Bardolph</span>, <em>running</em>.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Bardolph.</em> O, my lord, my lord; the sheriff, with a most monstrous watch,
-is at the door.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Falstaff.</em> Out, you rogue! play out the play: I have much to say in the
-behalf of that Falstaff.’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>One of the most characteristic descriptions of Sir John is that
-which Mrs. Quickly gives of him when he asks her ‘What is the
-gross sum that I owe thee?’</p>
-
-<p class='c016'>‘<em>Hostess.</em> Marry, if thou wert an honest man, thyself, and the money too.
-Thou didst swear to me upon a parcel-gilt goblet, sitting in my Dolphin-chamber,
-at the round table, by a sea-coal fire on Wednesday in Whitsun-week,
-when the prince broke thy head for likening his father to a singing
-man of Windsor; thou didst swear to me then, as I was washing thy wound,
-to marry me, and make me my lady thy wife. Canst thou deny it? Did
-not goodwife Keech, the butcher’s wife, come in then, and call me gossip
-Quickly? coming in to borrow a mess of vinegar; telling us, she had a
-good dish of prawns; whereby thou didst desire to eat some; whereby I
-told thee, they were ill for a green wound? And didst thou not, when she
-was gone down stairs, desire me to be no more so familiarity with such poor
-people; saying, that ere long they should call me madam? And didst thou
-not kiss me, and bid me fetch thee thirty shillings? I put thee now to thy
-book-oath; deny it, if thou canst.’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This scene is to us the most convincing proof of Falstaff’s power of
-gaining over the good will of those he was familiar with, except indeed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_283'>283</span>Bardolph’s somewhat profane exclamation on hearing the account of
-his death, ‘Would I were with him, wheresoe’er he is, whether in
-heaven or hell.’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>One of the topics of exulting superiority over others most common
-in Sir John’s mouth is his corpulence and the exterior marks of good
-living which he carries about him, thus ‘turning his vices into commodity.’
-He accounts for the friendship between the Prince and
-Poins, from ‘their legs being both of a bigness’; and compares
-Justice Shallow to ‘a man made after supper of a cheese-paring.’
-There cannot be a more striking gradation of character than that
-between Falstaff and Shallow, and Shallow and Silence. It seems
-difficult at first to fall lower than the squire; but this fool, great as he
-is, finds an admirer and humble foil in his cousin Silence. Vain of his
-acquaintance with Sir John, who makes a butt of him, he exclaims,
-‘Would, cousin Silence, that thou had’st seen that which this knight
-and I have seen!’—‘Aye, Master Shallow, we have heard the
-chimes at midnight,’ says Sir John. To Falstaff’s observation ‘I
-did not think Master Silence had been a man of this mettle,’ Silence
-answers, ‘Who, I? I have been merry twice and once ere now.’
-What an idea is here conveyed of a prodigality of living? What
-good husbandry and economical self-denial in his pleasures? What a
-stock of lively recollections? It is curious that Shakespear has
-ridiculed in Justice Shallow, who was ‘in some authority under the
-king,’ that disposition to unmeaning tautology which is the regal
-infirmity of later times, and which, it may be supposed, he acquired
-from talking to his cousin Silence, and receiving no answers.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'>‘<em>Falstaff.</em> You have here a goodly dwelling, and a rich.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Shallow.</em> Barren, barren, barren; beggars all, beggars all, Sir John:
-marry, good air. Spread Davy, spread Davy. Well said, Davy.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Falstaff.</em> This Davy serves you for good uses.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Shallow.</em> A good varlet, a good varlet, a very good varlet. By the mass,
-I have drank too much sack at supper. A good varlet. Now sit down,
-now sit down. Come, cousin.’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The true spirit of humanity, the thorough knowledge of the stuff
-we are made of, the practical wisdom with the seeming fooleries in
-the whole of the garden-scene at Shallow’s country-seat, and just
-before in the exquisite dialogue between him and Silence on the death
-of old Double, have no parallel any where else. In one point of view,
-they are laughable in the extreme; in another they are equally affecting,
-if it is affecting to shew <em>what a little thing is human life</em>, what a
-poor forked creature man is!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The heroic and serious part of these two plays founded on the story
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_284'>284</span>of Henry <span class='fss'>IV.</span> is not inferior to the comic and farcical. The characters
-of Hotspur and Prince Henry are two of the most beautiful and
-dramatic, both in themselves and from contrast, that ever were drawn.
-They are the essence of chivalry. We like Hotspur the best upon
-the whole, perhaps because he was unfortunate.—The characters of
-their fathers, Henry <span class='fss'>IV.</span> and old Northumberland, are kept up equally
-well. Henry naturally succeeds by his prudence and caution in
-keeping what he has got; Northumberland fails in his enterprise from
-an excess of the same quality, and is caught in the web of his own
-cold, dilatory policy. Owen Glendower is a masterly character. It
-as bold and original as it is intelligible and thoroughly natural. The
-disputes between him and Hotspur are managed with infinite address
-and insight into nature. We cannot help pointing out here some very
-beautiful lines, where Hotspur describes the fight between Glendower
-and Mortimer.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>——‘When on the gentle Severn’s sedgy bank,</div>
- <div class='line'>In single opposition hand to hand,</div>
- <div class='line'>He did confound the best part of an hour</div>
- <div class='line'>In changing hardiment with great Glendower:</div>
- <div class='line'>Three times they breath’d, and three times did they drink,</div>
- <div class='line'>Upon agreement, of swift Severn’s flood;</div>
- <div class='line'>Who then affrighted with their bloody looks,</div>
- <div class='line'>Ran fearfully among the trembling reeds,</div>
- <div class='line'>And hid his crisp head in the hollow bank,</div>
- <div class='line'>Blood-stained with these valiant combatants.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The peculiarity and the excellence of Shakespear’s poetry is, that
-it seems as if he made his imagination the hand-maid of nature, and
-nature the plaything of his imagination. He appears to have been all
-the characters, and in all the situations he describes. It is as if either
-he had had all their feelings, or had lent them all his genius to express
-themselves. There cannot be stronger instances of this than Hotspur’s
-rage when Henry <span class='fss'>IV.</span> forbids him to speak of Mortimer, his insensibility
-to all that his father and uncle urge to calm him, and his fine abstracted
-apostrophe to honour, ‘By heaven methinks it were an easy leap to
-pluck bright honour from the moon,’ etc. After all, notwithstanding
-the gallantry, generosity, good temper, and idle freaks of the mad-cap
-Prince of Wales, we should not have been sorry, if Northumberland’s
-force had come up in time to decide the fate of the battle at Shrewsbury;
-at least, we always heartily sympathise with Lady Percy’s grief,
-when she exclaims,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Had my sweet Harry had but half their numbers,</div>
- <div class='line'>To-day might I (hanging on Hotspur’s neck)</div>
- <div class='line'>Have talked of Monmouth’s grave.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_285'>285</span>The truth is, that we never could forgive the Prince’s treatment of
-Falstaff; though perhaps Shakespear knew what was best, according
-to the history, the nature of the times, and of the man. We speak
-only as dramatic critics. Whatever terror the French in those days
-might have of Henry <span class='fss'>V.</span> yet, to the readers of poetry at present,
-Falstaff is the better man of the two. We think of him and quote
-him oftener.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>HENRY V.</h3>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='sc'>Henry V.</span> is a very favourite monarch with the English nation, and he
-appears to have been also a favourite with Shakespear, who labours
-hard to apologise for the actions of the king, by shewing us the
-character of the man, as ‘the king of good fellows.’ He scarcely
-deserves this honour. He was fond of war and low company:—we
-know little else of him. He was careless, dissolute, and ambitious;—idle,
-or doing mischief. In private, he seemed to have no idea of the
-common decencies of life, which he subjected to a kind of regal
-licence; in public affairs, he seemed to have no idea of any rule of
-right or wrong, but brute force, glossed over with a little religious
-hypocrisy and archiepiscopal advice. His principles did not change
-with his situation and professions. His adventure on Gadshill was a
-prelude to the affair of Agincourt, only a bloodless one; Falstaff was
-a puny prompter of violence and outrage, compared with the pious and
-politic Archbishop of Canterbury, who gave the king <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">carte blanche</span></i>, in
-a genealogical tree of his family, to rob and murder in circles of latitude
-and longitude abroad—to save the possessions of the church at home.
-This appears in the speeches in Shakespear, where the hidden motives
-that actuate princes and their advisers in war and policy are better laid
-open than in speeches from the throne or woolsack. Henry, because
-he did not know how to govern his own kingdom, determined to make
-war upon his neighbours. Because his own title to the crown was
-doubtful, he laid claim to that of France. Because he did not know
-how to exercise the enormous power, which had just dropped into his
-hands, to any one good purpose, he immediately undertook (a cheap
-and obvious resource of sovereignty) to do all the mischief he could.
-Even if absolute monarchs had the wit to find out objects of laudable
-ambition, they could only ‘plume up their wills’ in adhering to the
-more sacred formula of the royal prerogative, ‘the right divine of
-kings to govern wrong,’ because will is only then triumphant when it
-is opposed to the will of others, because the pride of power is only
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_286'>286</span>then shewn, not when it consults the rights and interests of others, but
-when it insults and tramples on all justice and all humanity. Henry
-declares his resolution ‘when France is his, to bend it to his awe, or
-break it all to pieces’—a resolution worthy of a conqueror, to destroy
-all that he cannot enslave; and what adds to the joke, he lays all the
-blame of the consequences of his ambition on those who will not
-submit tamely to his tyranny. Such is the history of kingly power,
-from the beginning to the end of the world;—with this difference,
-that the object of war formerly, when the people adhered to their
-allegiance, was to depose kings; the object latterly, since the people
-swerved from their allegiance, has been to restore kings, and to make
-common cause against mankind. The object of our late invasion
-and conquest of France was to restore the legitimate monarch, the
-descendant of Hugh Capet, to the throne: Henry <span class='fss'>V.</span> in his time
-made war on and deposed the descendant of this very Hugh Capet,
-on the plea that he was a usurper and illegitimate. What would the
-great modern catspaw of legitimacy and restorer of divine right have
-said to the claim of Henry and the title of the descendants of Hugh
-Capet? Henry <span class='fss'>V.</span> it is true, was a hero, a King of England, and the
-conqueror of the king of France. Yet we feel little love or admiration
-for him. He was a hero, that is, he was ready to sacrifice his own
-life for the pleasure of destroying thousands of other lives: he was a
-king of England, but not a constitutional one, and we only like kings
-according to the law; lastly, he was a conqueror of the French king,
-and for this we dislike him less than if he had conquered the French
-people. How then do we like him? We like him in the play.
-There he is a very amiable monster, a very splendid pageant. As we
-like to gaze at a panther or a young lion in their cages in the Tower,
-and catch a pleasing horror from their glistening eyes, their velvet
-paws, and dreadless roar, so we take a very romantic, heroic, patriotic,
-and poetical delight in the boasts and feats of our younger Harry, as
-they appear on the stage and are confined to lines of ten syllables;
-where no blood follows the stroke that wounds our ears, where no
-harvest bends beneath horses’ hoofs, no city flames, no little child is
-butchered, no dead men’s bodies are found piled on heaps and festering
-the next morning—in the orchestra!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>So much for the politics of this play; now for the poetry. Perhaps
-one of the most striking images in all Shakespear is that given of war
-in the first lines of the Prologue.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘O for a muse of fire, that would ascend</div>
- <div class='line'>The brightest heaven of invention,</div>
- <div class='line'>A kingdom for a stage, princes to act,</div>
- <div class='line'>And monarchs to behold the swelling scene!</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_287'>287</span>Then should the warlike Harry, like himself,</div>
- <div class='line'>Assume the port of Mars, and <em>at his heels</em></div>
- <div class='line'><em>Leash’d in like hounds, should famine, sword, and fire</em></div>
- <div class='line'><em>Crouch for employment</em>.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Rubens, if he had painted it, would not have improved upon this
-simile.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The conversation between the Archbishop of Canterbury and the
-Bishop of Ely, relating to the sudden change in the manners of
-Henry <span class='fss'>V.</span> is among the well-known <em>Beauties</em> of Shakespear. It is
-indeed admirable both for strength and grace. It has sometimes
-occurred to us that Shakespear, in describing ‘the reformation’ of the
-Prince, might have had an eye to himself—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Which is a wonder how his grace should glean it,</div>
- <div class='line'>Since his addiction was to courses vain,</div>
- <div class='line'>His companies unletter’d, rude and shallow,</div>
- <div class='line'>His hours fill’d up with riots, banquets, sports;</div>
- <div class='line'>And never noted in him any study,</div>
- <div class='line'>Any retirement, any sequestration</div>
- <div class='line'>From open haunts and popularity.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Ely.</em> The strawberry grows underneath the nettle,</div>
- <div class='line'>And wholesome berries thrive and ripen best</div>
- <div class='line'>Neighbour’d by fruit of baser quality:</div>
- <div class='line'>And so the prince obscur’d his contemplation</div>
- <div class='line'>Under the veil of wildness, which no doubt</div>
- <div class='line'>Grew like the summer-grass, fastest by night,</div>
- <div class='line'>Unseen, yet crescive in his faculty.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>This at least is as probable an account of the progress of the poet’s
-mind as we have met with in any of the Essays on the Learning of
-Shakespear.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Nothing can be better managed than the caution which the king
-gives the meddling Archbishop, not to advise him rashly to engage in
-the war with France, his scrupulous dread of the consequences of that
-advice, and his eager desire to hear and follow it.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘And God forbid, my dear and faithful lord,</div>
- <div class='line'>That you should fashion, wrest, or bow your reading,</div>
- <div class='line'>Or nicely charge your understanding soul</div>
- <div class='line'>With opening titles miscreate, whose right</div>
- <div class='line'>Suits not in native colours with the truth.</div>
- <div class='line'>For God doth know how many now in health</div>
- <div class='line'>Shall drop their blood, in approbation</div>
- <div class='line'>Of what your reverence shall incite us to.</div>
- <div class='line'>Therefore take heed how you impawn your person,</div>
- <div class='line'>How you awake our sleeping sword of war;</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_288'>288</span>We charge you in the name of God, take heed.</div>
- <div class='line'>For never two such kingdoms did contend</div>
- <div class='line'>Without much fall of blood, whose guiltless drops</div>
- <div class='line'>Are every one a woe, a sore complaint</div>
- <div class='line'>‘Gainst him, whose wrong gives edge unto the swords</div>
- <div class='line'>That make such waste in brief mortality.</div>
- <div class='line'>Under this conjuration, speak, my lord;</div>
- <div class='line'>For we will hear, note, and believe in heart,</div>
- <div class='line'>That what you speak, is in your conscience wash’d,</div>
- <div class='line'>As pure as sin with baptism.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Another characteristic instance of the blindness of human nature to
-every thing but its own interests, is the complaint made by the king of
-‘the ill neighbourhood’ of the Scot in attacking England when she
-was attacking France.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘For once the eagle England being in prey,</div>
- <div class='line'>To her unguarded nest the weazel Scot</div>
- <div class='line'>Comes sneaking, and so sucks her princely eggs.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is worth observing that in all these plays, which give an admirable
-picture of the spirit of the <em>good old times</em>, the moral inference
-does not at all depend upon the nature of the actions, but on the
-dignity or meanness of the persons committing them. ‘The eagle
-England’ has a right ‘to be in prey,’ but ‘the weazel Scot’ has
-none ‘to come sneaking to her nest,’ which she has left to pounce
-upon others. Might was right, without equivocation or disguise, in
-that heroic and chivalrous age. The substitution of right for might,
-even in theory, is among the refinements and abuses of modern
-philosophy.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A more beautiful rhetorical delineation of the effects of subordination
-in a commonwealth can hardly be conceived than the
-following:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘For government, though high and low and lower,</div>
- <div class='line'>Put into parts, doth keep in one consent,</div>
- <div class='line'>Congruing in a full and natural close,</div>
- <div class='line'>Like music.</div>
- <div class='line'>——Therefore heaven doth divide</div>
- <div class='line'>The state of man in divers functions,</div>
- <div class='line'>Setting endeavour in continual motion;</div>
- <div class='line'>To which is fixed, as an aim or butt,</div>
- <div class='line'>Obedience: for so work the honey-bees;</div>
- <div class='line'>Creatures that by a rule in nature, teach</div>
- <div class='line'>The art of order to a peopled kingdom.</div>
- <div class='line'>They have a king, and officers of sorts:</div>
- <div class='line'>Where some, like magistrates, correct at home;</div>
- <div class='line'>Others, like merchants, venture trade abroad;</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_289'>289</span>Others, like soldiers, armed in their stings,</div>
- <div class='line'>Make boot upon the summer’s velvet buds;</div>
- <div class='line'>Which pillage they with merry march bring home</div>
- <div class='line'>To the tent-royal of their emperor;</div>
- <div class='line'>Who, busied in his majesty, surveys</div>
- <div class='line'>The singing mason building roofs of gold;</div>
- <div class='line'>The civil citizens kneading up the honey;</div>
- <div class='line'>The poor mechanic porters crowding in</div>
- <div class='line'>Their heavy burthens at his narrow gate;</div>
- <div class='line'>The sad-eyed justice, with his surly hum,</div>
- <div class='line'>Delivering o’er to executors pale</div>
- <div class='line'>The lazy yawning drone. I this infer,—</div>
- <div class='line'>That many things, having full reference</div>
- <div class='line'>To one consent, may work contrariously:</div>
- <div class='line'>As many arrows, loosed several ways,</div>
- <div class='line'>Come to one mark;</div>
- <div class='line'>As many ways meet in one town;</div>
- <div class='line'>As many fresh streams meet in one salt sea;</div>
- <div class='line'>As many lines close in the dial’s centre;</div>
- <div class='line'>So may a thousand actions, once a-foot,</div>
- <div class='line'>End in one purpose, and be all well borne</div>
- <div class='line'>Without defeat.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='sc'>Henry V.</span> is but one of Shakespear’s second-rate plays. Yet by
-quoting passages, like this, from his second-rate plays alone, we might
-make a volume ‘rich with his praise,’</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘As is the oozy bottom of the sea</div>
- <div class='line'>With sunken wrack and sumless treasuries.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Of this sort are the king’s remonstrance to Scroop, Grey, and
-Cambridge, on the detection of their treason, his address to the
-soldiers at the siege of Harfleur, and the still finer one before the
-battle of Agincourt, the description of the night before the battle,
-and the reflections on ceremony put into the mouth of the king.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘O hard condition; twin-born with greatness,</div>
- <div class='line'>Subjected to the breath of every fool,</div>
- <div class='line'>Whose sense no more can feel but his own wringing!</div>
- <div class='line'>What infinite heart’s ease must kings neglect,</div>
- <div class='line'>That private men enjoy; and what have kings,</div>
- <div class='line'>That privates have not too, save ceremony?</div>
- <div class='line'>Save general ceremony?</div>
- <div class='line'>And what art thou, thou idol ceremony?</div>
- <div class='line'>What kind of God art thou, that suffer’st more</div>
- <div class='line'>Of mortal griefs, than do thy worshippers?</div>
- <div class='line'>What are thy rents? what are thy comings-in?</div>
- <div class='line'>O ceremony, shew me but thy worth!</div>
- <div class='line'>What is thy soul, O adoration?</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_290'>290</span>Art thou aught else but place, degree, and form,</div>
- <div class='line'>Creating awe and fear in other men?</div>
- <div class='line'>Wherein thou art less happy, being feared,</div>
- <div class='line'>Than they in fearing.</div>
- <div class='line'>What drink’st thou oft, instead of homage sweet,</div>
- <div class='line'>But poison’d flattery? O, be sick, great greatness,</div>
- <div class='line'>And bid thy ceremony give thee cure!</div>
- <div class='line'>Think’st thou, the fiery fever will go out</div>
- <div class='line'>With titles blown from adulation?</div>
- <div class='line'>Will it give place to flexure and low bending?</div>
- <div class='line'>Can’st thou, when thou command’st the beggar’s knee,</div>
- <div class='line'>Command the health of it? No, thou proud dream,</div>
- <div class='line'>That play’st so subtly with a king’s repose,</div>
- <div class='line'>I am a king, that find thee: and I know,</div>
- <div class='line'>’Tis not the balm, the sceptre, and the ball,</div>
- <div class='line'>The sword, the mace, the crown imperial,</div>
- <div class='line'>The enter-tissu’d robe of gold and pearl,</div>
- <div class='line'>The farsed title running ‘fore the king,</div>
- <div class='line'>The throne he sits on, nor the tide of pomp</div>
- <div class='line'>That beats upon the high shore of this world,</div>
- <div class='line'>No, not all these, thrice-gorgeous ceremony,</div>
- <div class='line'>Not all these, laid in bed majestical,</div>
- <div class='line'>Can sleep so soundly as the wretched slave;</div>
- <div class='line'>Who, with a body fill’d, and vacant mind,</div>
- <div class='line'>Gets him to rest, cramm’d with distressful bread,</div>
- <div class='line'>Never sees horrid night, the child of hell:</div>
- <div class='line'>But like a lacquey, from the rise to set,</div>
- <div class='line'>Sweats in the eye of Phœbus, and all night</div>
- <div class='line'>Sleeps in Elysium; next day, after dawn,</div>
- <div class='line'>Doth rise, and help Hyperion to his horse;</div>
- <div class='line'>And follows so the ever-running year</div>
- <div class='line'>With profitable labour, to his grave:</div>
- <div class='line'>And, but for ceremony, such a wretch,</div>
- <div class='line'>Winding up days with toil, and nights with sleep,</div>
- <div class='line'>Has the forehand and vantage of a king.</div>
- <div class='line'>The slave, a member of the country’s peace,</div>
- <div class='line'>Enjoys it; but in gross brain little wots,</div>
- <div class='line'>What watch the king keeps to maintain the peace,</div>
- <div class='line'>Whose hours the peasant best advantages.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Most of these passages are well known: there is one, which we
-do not remember to have seen noticed, and yet it is no whit inferior
-to the rest in heroic beauty. It is the account of the deaths of York
-and Suffolk.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Exeter.</em> The duke of York commends him to your majesty.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>K. Henry.</em> Lives he, good uncle? thrice within this hour,</div>
- <div class='line'>I saw him down; thrice up again, and fighting;</div>
- <div class='line'>From helmet to the spur all blood he was.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_291'>291</span><em>Exeter.</em> In which array (brave soldier) doth he lie,</div>
- <div class='line'>Larding the plain: and by his bloody side</div>
- <div class='line'>(Yoke-fellow to his honour-owing wounds)</div>
- <div class='line'>The noble earl of Suffolk also lies.</div>
- <div class='line'>Suffolk first died: and York, all haggled o’er,</div>
- <div class='line'>Comes to him, where in gore he lay insteep’d,</div>
- <div class='line'>And takes him by the beard; kisses the gashes,</div>
- <div class='line'>That bloodily did yawn upon his face;</div>
- <div class='line'>And cries aloud—<em>Tarry, dear cousin Suffolk!</em></div>
- <div class='line'><em>My soul shall thine keep company to heaven:</em></div>
- <div class='line'><em>Tarry, sweet soul, for mine, then fly a-breast;</em></div>
- <div class='line'><em>As, in this glorious and well-foughten field,</em></div>
- <div class='line'><em>We kept together in our chivalry!</em></div>
- <div class='line'>Upon these words I came, and cheer’d him up:</div>
- <div class='line'>He smil’d me in the face, raught me his hand,</div>
- <div class='line'>And, with a feeble gripe, says—<em>Dear my lord,</em></div>
- <div class='line'><em>Commend my service to my sovereign</em>.</div>
- <div class='line'>So did he turn, and over Suffolk’s neck</div>
- <div class='line'>He threw his wounded arm, and kiss’d his lips;</div>
- <div class='line'>And so, espous’d to death, with blood he seal’d</div>
- <div class='line'>A testament of noble-ending love.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>But we must have done with splendid quotations. The behaviour
-of the king, in the difficult and doubtful circumstances in which he
-is placed, is as patient and modest as it is spirited and lofty in his
-prosperous fortune. The character of the French nobles is also very
-admirably depicted; and the Dauphin’s praise of his horse shews the
-vanity of that class of persons in a very striking point of view.
-Shakespear always accompanies a foolish prince with a satirical
-courtier, as we see in this instance. The comic parts of <span class='sc'>Henry V.</span>
-are very inferior to those of <cite>Henry IV.</cite> Falstaff is dead, and without
-him, Pistol, Nym, and Bardolph, are satellites without a sun.
-Fluellen the Welchman is the most entertaining character in the
-piece. He is good-natured, brave, choleric, and pedantic. His
-parallel between Alexander and Harry of Monmouth, and his desire
-to have ‘some disputations’ with Captain Macmorris on the discipline
-of the Roman wars, in the heat of the battle, are never to be forgotten.
-His treatment of Pistol is as good as Pistol’s treatment of
-his French prisoner. There are two other remarkable prose passages
-in this play: the conversation of Henry in disguise with the three
-centinels on the duties of a soldier, and his courtship of Katherine
-in broken French. We like them both exceedingly, though the
-first savours perhaps too much of the king, and the last too little of
-the lover.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_292'>292</span>
- <h3 class='c010'>HENRY VI.<br /> <span class='c020'>IN THREE PARTS</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>During the time of the civil wars of York and Lancaster, England
-was a perfect bear-garden, and Shakespear has given us a very lively
-picture of the scene. The three parts of <span class='sc'>Henry VI.</span> convey a picture
-of very little else; and are inferior to the other historical plays.
-They have brilliant passages; but the general ground-work is comparatively
-poor and meagre, the style ‘flat and unraised.’ There are
-few lines like the following:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Glory is like a circle in the water;</div>
- <div class='line'>Which never ceaseth to enlarge itself,</div>
- <div class='line'>Till by broad spreading it disperse to nought.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The first part relates to the wars in France after the death of
-Henry <span class='fss'>V.</span> and the story of the Maid of Orleans. She is here almost
-as scurvily treated as in Voltaire’s Pucelle. Talbot is a very
-magnificent sketch: there is something as formidable in this portrait
-of him, as there would be in a monumental figure of him or in the
-sight of the armour which he wore. The scene in which he visits
-the Countess of Auvergne, who seeks to entrap him, is a very spirited
-one, and his description of his own treatment while a prisoner to the
-French not less remarkable.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Salisbury.</em> Yet tell’st thou not how thou wert entertain’d.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Talbot.</em> With scoffs and scorns, and contumelious taunts.</div>
- <div class='line'>In open market-place produced they me,</div>
- <div class='line'>To be a public spectacle to all.</div>
- <div class='line'>Here, said they, is the terror of the French,</div>
- <div class='line'>The scarecrow that affrights our children so.</div>
- <div class='line'>Then broke I from the officers that led me,</div>
- <div class='line'>And with my nails digg’d stones out of the ground,</div>
- <div class='line'>To hurl at the beholders of my shame.</div>
- <div class='line'>My grisly countenance made others fly,</div>
- <div class='line'>None durst come near for fear of sudden death.</div>
- <div class='line'>In iron walls they deem’d me not secure:</div>
- <div class='line'>So great a fear my name amongst them spread,</div>
- <div class='line'>That they suppos’d I could rend bars of steel,</div>
- <div class='line'>And spurn in pieces posts of adamant.</div>
- <div class='line'>Wherefore a guard of chosen shot I had:</div>
- <div class='line'>They walk’d about me every minute-while;</div>
- <div class='line'>And if I did but stir out of my bed,</div>
- <div class='line'>Ready they were to shoot me to the heart.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_293'>293</span>The second part relates chiefly to the contests between the nobles
-during the minority of Henry, and the death of Gloucester, the good
-Duke Humphrey. The character of Cardinal Beaufort is the most
-prominent in the group: the account of his death is one of our
-author’s master-pieces. So is the speech of Gloucester to the nobles
-on the loss of the provinces of France by the King’s marriage with
-Margaret of Anjou. The pretensions and growing ambition of the
-Duke of York, the father of Richard <span class='fss'>III.</span> are also very ably developed.
-Among the episodes, the tragi-comedy of Jack Cade, and the detection
-of the impostor Simcox are truly edifying.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The third part describes Henry’s loss of his crown: his death
-takes place in the last act, which is usually thrust into the common
-acting play of <cite>Richard III.</cite> The character of Gloucester, afterwards
-King Richard, is here very powerfully commenced, and his
-dangerous designs and long-reaching ambition are fully described in
-his soliloquy in the third act, beginning, ‘Aye, Edward will use
-women honourably.’ Henry <span class='fss'>VI.</span> is drawn as distinctly as his high-spirited
-Queen, and notwithstanding the very mean figure which
-Henry makes as a King, we still feel more respect for him than for
-his wife.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>We have already observed that Shakespear was scarcely more
-remarkable for the force and marked contrasts of his characters than
-for the truth and subtlety with which he has distinguished those
-which approached the nearest to each other. For instance, the soul
-of Othello is hardly more distinct from that of Iago than that of
-Desdemona is shewn to be from Æmilia’s; the ambition of Macbeth
-is as distinct from the ambition of Richard <span class='fss'>III.</span> as it is from the
-meekness of Duncan; the real madness of Lear is as different from
-the feigned madness of Edgar<a id='r69' /><a href='#f69' class='c012'><sup>[69]</sup></a> as from the babbling of the fool; the
-contrast between wit and folly in Falstaff and Shallow is not more
-characteristic though more obvious than the gradations of folly,
-loquacious or reserved, in Shallow and Silence; and again, the
-gallantry of Prince Henry is as little confounded with that of Hotspur
-as with the cowardice of Falstaff, or as the sensual and philosophic
-cowardice of the Knight is with the pitiful and cringing cowardice
-of Parolles. All these several personages were as different in Shakespear
-as they would have been in themselves: his imagination
-borrowed from the life, and every circumstance, object, motive,
-passion, operated there as it would in reality, and produced a world
-of men and women as distinct, as true and as various as those that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_294'>294</span>exist in nature. The peculiar property of Shakespear’s imagination
-was this truth, accompanied with the unconsciousness of nature:
-indeed, imagination to be perfect must be unconscious, at least in
-production; for nature is so.—We shall attempt one example more
-in the characters of Richard <span class='fss'>II.</span> and Henry <span class='fss'>VI.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The characters and situations of both these persons were so nearly
-alike, that they would have been completely confounded by a common-place
-poet. Yet they are kept quite distinct in Shakespear. Both
-were kings, and both unfortunate. Both lost their crowns owing to
-their mismanagement and imbecility; the one from a thoughtless,
-wilful abuse of power, the other from an indifference to it. The
-manner in which they bear their misfortunes corresponds exactly to
-the causes which led to them. The one is always lamenting the loss
-of his power which he has not the spirit to regain; the other seems
-only to regret that he had ever been king, and is glad to be rid of
-the power, with the trouble; the effeminacy of the one is that of a
-voluptuary, proud, revengeful, impatient of contradiction, and inconsolable
-in his misfortunes; the effeminacy of the other is that of
-an indolent, good-natured mind, naturally averse to the turmoils of
-ambition and the cares of greatness, and who wishes to pass his time
-in monkish indolence and contemplation.—Richard bewails the loss
-of the kingly power only as it was the means of gratifying his pride
-and luxury; Henry regards it only as a means of doing right, and
-is less desirous of the advantages to be derived from possessing it
-than afraid of exercising it wrong. In knighting a young soldier, he
-gives him ghostly advice—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Edward Plantagenet, arise a knight,</div>
- <div class='line'>And learn this lesson, draw thy sword in right.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Richard <span class='fss'>II.</span> in the first speeches of the play betrays his real
-character. In the first alarm of his pride, on hearing of Bolingbroke’s
-rebellion, before his presumption has met with any check, he
-exclaims—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Mock not my senseless conjuration, lords:</div>
- <div class='line'>This earth shall have a feeling, and these stones</div>
- <div class='line'>Prove armed soldiers, ere her native king</div>
- <div class='line'>Shall faulter under proud rebellious arms.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Not all the water in the rough rude sea</div>
- <div class='line'>Can wash the balm from an anointed king;</div>
- <div class='line'>The breath of worldly man cannot depose</div>
- <div class='line'>The Deputy elected by the Lord.</div>
- <div class='line'>For every man that Bolingbroke hath prest,</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_295'>295</span>To lift sharp steel against our golden crown,</div>
- <div class='line'>Heaven for his Richard hath in heavenly pay</div>
- <div class='line'>A glorious angel; then if angels fight,</div>
- <div class='line'>Weak men must fall; for Heaven still guards the right.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Yet, notwithstanding this royal confession of faith, on the very
-first news of actual disaster, all his conceit of himself as the peculiar
-favourite of Providence vanishes into air.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘But now the blood of twenty thousand men</div>
- <div class='line'>Did triumph in my face, and they are fled.</div>
- <div class='line'>All souls that will be safe fly from my side;</div>
- <div class='line'>For time hath set a blot upon my pride.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Immediately after, however, recollecting that ‘cheap defence’ of
-the divinity of kings which is to be found in opinion, he is for arming
-his name against his enemies.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Awake, thou coward Majesty, thou sleep’st;</div>
- <div class='line'>Is not the King’s name forty thousand names?</div>
- <div class='line'>Arm, arm, my name: a puny subject strikes</div>
- <div class='line'>At thy great glory.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>King Henry does not make any such vapouring resistance to the
-loss of his crown, but lets it slip from off his head as a weight which
-he is neither able nor willing to bear; stands quietly by to see the
-issue of the contest for his kingdom, as if it were a game at push-pin,
-and is pleased when the odds prove against him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>When Richard first hears of the death of his favourites, Bushy,
-Bagot, and the rest, he indignantly rejects all idea of any further
-efforts, and only indulges in the extravagant impatience of his grief
-and his despair, in that fine speech which has been so often quoted:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Aumerle.</em> Where is the duke my father, with his power?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>K. Richard.</em> No matter where: of comfort no man speak:</div>
- <div class='line'>Let’s talk of graves, of worms, and epitaphs,</div>
- <div class='line'>Make dust our paper, and with rainy eyes</div>
- <div class='line'>Write sorrow in the bosom of the earth!</div>
- <div class='line'>Let’s chuse executors, and talk of wills:</div>
- <div class='line'>And yet not so—for what can we bequeath,</div>
- <div class='line'>Save our deposed bodies to the ground?</div>
- <div class='line'>Our lands, our lives, and all are Bolingbroke’s,</div>
- <div class='line'>And nothing can we call our own but death,</div>
- <div class='line'>And that small model of the barren earth,</div>
- <div class='line'>Which serves as paste and cover to our bones.</div>
- <div class='line'>For heaven’s sake let us sit upon the ground,</div>
- <div class='line'>And tell sad stories of the death of Kings:</div>
- <div class='line'>How some have been depos’d, some slain in war;</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_296'>296</span>Some haunted by the ghosts they dispossess’d;</div>
- <div class='line'>Some poison’d by their wives, some sleeping kill’d;</div>
- <div class='line'>All murder’d:—for within the hollow crown,</div>
- <div class='line'>That rounds the mortal temples of a king,</div>
- <div class='line'>Keeps death his court: and there the antic sits,</div>
- <div class='line'>Scoffing his state, and grinning at his pomp!</div>
- <div class='line'>Allowing him a breath, a little scene</div>
- <div class='line'>To monarchize, be fear’d, and kill with looks;</div>
- <div class='line'>Infusing him with self and vain conceit—</div>
- <div class='line'>As if this flesh, which walls about our life,</div>
- <div class='line'>Were brass impregnable; and, humour’d thus,</div>
- <div class='line'>Comes at the last, and, with a little pin,</div>
- <div class='line'>Bores through his castle wall, and—farewell king!</div>
- <div class='line'>Cover your heads, and mock not flesh and blood</div>
- <div class='line'>With solemn reverence; throw away respect,</div>
- <div class='line'>Tradition, form, and ceremonious duty,</div>
- <div class='line'>For you have but mistook me all this while:</div>
- <div class='line'>I live on bread like you, feel want, taste grief,</div>
- <div class='line'>Need friends, like you;—subjected thus,</div>
- <div class='line'>How can you say to me—I am a king?’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>There is as little sincerity afterwards in his affected resignation
-to his fate, as there is fortitude in this exaggerated picture of his
-misfortunes before they have happened.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>When Northumberland comes back with the message from Bolingbroke,
-he exclaims, anticipating the result,—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘What must the king do now? Must he submit?</div>
- <div class='line'>The king shall do it: must he be depos’d?</div>
- <div class='line'>The king shall be contented; must he lose</div>
- <div class='line'>The name of king? O’ God’s name let it go.</div>
- <div class='line'>I’ll give my jewels for a set of beads;</div>
- <div class='line'>My gorgeous palace for a hermitage;</div>
- <div class='line'>My gay apparel for an alms-man’s gown;</div>
- <div class='line'>My figur’d goblets for a dish of wood;</div>
- <div class='line'>My sceptre for a palmer’s walking staff;</div>
- <div class='line'>My subjects for a pair of carved saints,</div>
- <div class='line'>And my large kingdom for a little grave—</div>
- <div class='line'>A little, little grave, an obscure grave.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>How differently is all this expressed in King Henry’s soliloquy,
-during the battle with Edward’s party:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘This battle fares like to the morning’s war,</div>
- <div class='line'>When dying clouds contend with growing light,</div>
- <div class='line'>What time the shepherd blowing of his nails,</div>
- <div class='line'>Can neither call it perfect day or night.</div>
- <div class='line'>Here on this mole-hill will I sit me down;</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_297'>297</span>To whom God will, there be the victory!</div>
- <div class='line'>For Margaret my Queen and Clifford too</div>
- <div class='line'>Have chid me from the battle, swearing both</div>
- <div class='line'>They prosper best of all when I am thence.</div>
- <div class='line'>Would I were dead, if God’s good will were so.</div>
- <div class='line'>For what is in this world but grief and woe?</div>
- <div class='line'>O God! methinks it were a happy life</div>
- <div class='line'>To be no better than a homely swain,</div>
- <div class='line'>To sit upon a hill as I do now,</div>
- <div class='line'>To carve out dials quaintly, point by point,</div>
- <div class='line'>Thereby to see the minutes how they run:</div>
- <div class='line'>How many make the hour full complete,</div>
- <div class='line'>How many hours bring about the day,</div>
- <div class='line'>How many days will finish up the year,</div>
- <div class='line'>How many years a mortal man may live.</div>
- <div class='line'>When this is known, then to divide the times;</div>
- <div class='line'>So many hours must I tend my flock,</div>
- <div class='line'>So many hours must I take my rest,</div>
- <div class='line'>So many hours must I contemplate,</div>
- <div class='line'>So many hours must I sport myself;</div>
- <div class='line'>So many days my ewes have been with young,</div>
- <div class='line'>So many weeks ere the poor fools will yean,</div>
- <div class='line'>So many months ere I shall shear the fleece:</div>
- <div class='line'>So many minutes, hours, weeks, months, and years</div>
- <div class='line'>Past over, to the end they were created,</div>
- <div class='line'>Would bring white hairs unto a quiet grave.</div>
- <div class='line'>Ah! what a life were this! how sweet, how lovely!</div>
- <div class='line'>Gives not the hawthorn bush a sweeter shade</div>
- <div class='line'>To shepherds looking on their silly sheep,</div>
- <div class='line'>Than doth a rich embroidered canopy</div>
- <div class='line'>To kings that fear their subjects’ treachery?</div>
- <div class='line'>O yes it doth, a thousand fold it doth.</div>
- <div class='line'>And to conclude, the shepherds’ homely curds,</div>
- <div class='line'>His cold thin drink out of his leather bottle,</div>
- <div class='line'>His wonted sleep under a fresh tree’s shade,</div>
- <div class='line'>All which secure and sweetly he enjoys,</div>
- <div class='line'>Is far beyond a prince’s delicates,</div>
- <div class='line'>His viands sparkling in a golden cup,</div>
- <div class='line'>His body couched in a curious bed,</div>
- <div class='line'>When care, mistrust, and treasons wait on him.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>This is a true and beautiful description of a naturally quiet and
-contented disposition, and not, like the former, the splenetic effusion
-of disappointed ambition.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the last scene of <cite>Richard II.</cite> his despair lends him courage: he
-beats the keeper, slays two of his assassins, and dies with imprecations
-in his mouth against Sir Pierce Exton, who ‘had staggered his royal
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_298'>298</span>person.’ Henry, when he is seized by the deer-stealers, only reads
-them a moral lecture on the duty of allegiance and the sanctity of an
-oath; and when stabbed by Gloucester in the tower, reproaches him
-with his crimes, but pardons him his own death.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>RICHARD III.</h3>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='sc'>Richard III.</span> may be considered as properly a stage-play: it belongs
-to the theatre, rather than to the closet. We shall therefore criticise
-it chiefly with a reference to the manner in which we have seen it
-performed. It is the character in which Garrick came out: it was
-the second character in which Mr. Kean appeared, and in which he
-acquired his fame. Shakespear we have always with us: actors we
-have only for a few seasons; and therefore some account of them may
-be acceptable, if not to our cotemporaries, to those who come after
-us, if ‘that rich and idle personage, Posterity,’ should deign to look
-into our writings.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is possible to form a higher conception of the character of Richard
-than that given by Mr. Kean: but we cannot imagine any character
-represented with greater distinctness and precision, more perfectly
-<em>articulated</em> in every part. Perhaps indeed there is too much of what is
-technically called execution. When we first saw this celebrated actor
-in the part, we thought he sometimes failed from an exuberance of
-manner, and dissipated the impression of the general character by the
-variety of his resources. To be complete, his delineation of it should
-have more solidity, depth, sustained and impassioned feeling, with
-somewhat less brilliancy, with fewer glancing lights, pointed transitions,
-and pantomimic evolutions.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Richard of Shakespear is towering and lofty; equally impetuous
-and commanding; haughty, violent, and subtle; bold and
-treacherous; confident in his strength as well as in his cunning; raised
-high by his birth, and higher by his talents and his crimes; a royal
-usurper, a princely hypocrite, a tyrant, and a murderer of the house of
-Plantagenet.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘But I was born so high:</div>
- <div class='line'>Our aery buildeth in the cedar’s top,</div>
- <div class='line'>And dallies with the wind, and scorns the sun.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The idea conveyed in these lines (which are indeed omitted in the
-miserable medley acted for <span class='sc'>Richard III.</span>) is never lost sight of by
-Shakespear, and should not be out of the actor’s mind for a moment.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_299'>299</span>The restless and sanguinary Richard is not a man striving to be great,
-but to be greater than he is; conscious of his strength of will, his
-power of intellect, his daring courage, his elevated station; and making
-use of these advantages to commit unheard-of crimes, and to shield
-himself from remorse and infamy.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>If Mr. Kean does not entirely succeed in concentrating all the lines
-of the character, as drawn by Shakespear, he gives an animation,
-vigour, and relief to the part which we have not seen equalled. He
-is more refined than Cooke; more bold, varied, and original than
-Kemble in the same character. In some parts he is deficient in dignity,
-and particularly in the scenes of state business, he has by no means an
-air of artificial authority. There is at times an aspiring elevation, an
-enthusiastic rapture in his expectations of attaining the crown, and
-at others a gloating expression of sullen delight, as if he already
-clenched the bauble, and held it in his grasp. The courtship scene
-with Lady Anne is an admirable exhibition of smooth and smiling
-villainy. The progress of wily adulation, of encroaching humility,
-is finely marked by his action, voice and eye. He seems, like the
-first Tempter, to approach his prey, secure of the event, and as if
-success had smoothed his way before him. The late Mr. Cooke’s
-manner of representing this scene was more vehement, hurried, and
-full of anxious uncertainty. This, though more natural in general,
-was less in character in this particular instance. Richard should woo
-less as a lover than as an actor—to shew his mental superiority, and
-power of making others the playthings of his purposes. Mr. Kean’s
-attitude in leaning against the side of the stage before he comes
-forward to address Lady Anne, is one of the most graceful and
-striking ever witnessed on the stage. It would do for Titian to paint.
-The frequent and rapid transition of his voice from the expression of
-the fiercest passion to the most familiar tones of conversation was that
-which gave a peculiar grace of novelty to his acting on his first
-appearance. This has been since imitated and caricatured by others,
-and he himself uses the artifice more sparingly than he did. His bye-play
-is excellent. His manner of bidding his friends ‘Good night,’
-after pausing with the point of his sword, drawn slowly backward and
-forward on the ground, as if considering the plan of the battle next
-day, is a particularly happy and natural thought. He gives to the
-two last acts of the play the greatest animation and effect. He fills
-every part of the stage; and makes up for the deficiency of his person
-by what has been sometimes objected to as an excess of action. The
-concluding scene in which he is killed by Richmond is the most
-brilliant of the whole. He fights at last like one drunk with wounds;
-and the attitude in which he stands with his hands stretched out, after
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_300'>300</span>his sword is wrested from him, has a preternatural and terrific
-grandeur, as if his will could not be disarmed, and the very phantoms
-of his despair had power to kill.—Mr. Kean has since in a great
-measure effaced the impression of his Richard <span class='fss'>III.</span> by the superior
-efforts of his genius in Othello (his master-piece), in the murder-scene
-in Macbeth, in Richard <span class='fss'>II.</span>, in Sir Giles Overreach, and lastly in
-Oroonoko; but we still like to look back to his first performance of
-this part, both because it first assured his admirers of his future success,
-and because we bore our feeble but, at that time, not useless testimony
-to the merits of this very original actor, on which the town was
-considerably divided for no other reason than because they <em>were</em>
-original.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The manner in which Shakespear’s plays have been generally
-altered or rather mangled by modern mechanists, is a disgrace to the
-English stage. The patch-work <span class='sc'>Richard III.</span> which is acted under
-the sanction of his name, and which was manufactured by Cibber, is a
-striking example of this remark.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The play itself is undoubtedly a very powerful effusion of Shakespear’s
-genius. The ground-work of the character of Richard, that
-mixture of intellectual vigour with moral depravity, in which Shakespear
-delighted to shew his strength—gave full scope as well as
-temptation to the exercise of his imagination. The character of his
-hero is almost every where predominant, and marks its lurid track
-throughout. The original play is however too long for representation,
-and there are some few scenes which might be better spared than
-preserved, and by omitting which it would remain a complete whole.
-The only rule, indeed, for altering Shakespear is to retrench certain
-passages which may be considered either as superfluous or obsolete,
-but not to add or transpose any thing. The arrangement and developement
-of the story, and the mutual contrast and combination of the
-<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">dramatis personæ</span></i>, are in general as finely managed as the developement
-of the characters or the expression of the passions.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This rule has not been adhered to in the present instance. Some
-of the most important and striking passages in the principal character
-have been omitted, to make room for idle and misplaced extracts from
-other plays; the only intention of which seems to have been to make
-the character of Richard as odious and disgusting as possible. It is
-apparently for no other purpose than to make Gloucester stab King
-Henry on the stage, that the fine abrupt introduction of the character
-in the opening of the play is lost in the tedious whining morality of
-the uxorious king (taken from another play);—we say <em>tedious</em>,
-because it interrupts the business of the scene, and loses its beauty
-and effect by having no intelligible connection with the previous
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_301'>301</span>character of the mild, well-meaning monarch. The passages which
-the unfortunate Henry has to recite are beautiful and pathetic in themselves,
-but they have nothing to do with the world that Richard has
-to ‘bustle in.’ In the same spirit of vulgar caricature is the scene
-between Richard and Lady Anne (when his wife) interpolated
-without any authority, merely to gratify this favourite propensity to
-disgust and loathing. With the same perverse consistency, Richard,
-after his last fatal struggle, is raised up by some Galvanic process, to
-utter the imprecation, without any motive but pure malignity, which
-Shakespear has so properly put into the mouth of Northumberland on
-hearing of Percy’s death. To make room for these worse than needless
-additions, many of the most striking passages in the real play have
-been omitted by the foppery and ignorance of the prompt-book critics.
-We do not mean to insist merely on passages which are fine as poetry
-and to the reader, such as Clarence’s dream, etc. but on those which
-are important to the understanding of the character, and peculiarly
-adapted for stage-effect. We will give the following as instances
-among several others. The first is the scene where Richard enters
-abruptly to the queen and her friends to defend himself:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Gloucester.</em> They do me wrong, and I will not endure it.</div>
- <div class='line'>Who are they that complain unto the king,</div>
- <div class='line'>That I forsooth am stern, and love them not?</div>
- <div class='line'>By holy Paul, they love his grace but lightly,</div>
- <div class='line'>That fill his ears with such dissentious rumours:</div>
- <div class='line'>Because I cannot flatter and look fair,</div>
- <div class='line'>Smile in men’s faces, smooth, deceive, and cog,</div>
- <div class='line'>Duck with French nods, and apish courtesy,</div>
- <div class='line'>I must be held a rancorous enemy.</div>
- <div class='line'>Cannot a plain man live, and think no harm,</div>
- <div class='line'>But thus his simple truth must be abus’d</div>
- <div class='line'>With silken, sly, insinuating Jacks?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Gray.</em> To whom in all this presence speaks your grace?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Gloucester.</em> To thee, that hast nor honesty nor grace;</div>
- <div class='line'>When have I injur’d thee, when done thee wrong?</div>
- <div class='line'>Or thee? or thee? or any of your faction?</div>
- <div class='line'>A plague upon you all!’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Nothing can be more characteristic than the turbulent pretensions to
-meekness and simplicity in this address. Again, the versatility and
-adroitness of Richard is admirably described in the following ironical
-conversation with Brakenbury:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Brakenbury.</em> I beseech your graces both to pardon me.</div>
- <div class='line'>His majesty hath straitly given in charge,</div>
- <div class='line'>That no man shall have private conference,</div>
- <div class='line'>Of what degree soever, with your brother.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_302'>302</span><em>Gloucester.</em> E’en so, and please your worship, Brakenbury.</div>
- <div class='line'>You may partake of any thing we say:</div>
- <div class='line'>We speak no treason, man—we say the king</div>
- <div class='line'>Is wise and virtuous, and his noble queen</div>
- <div class='line'>Well strook in years, fair, and not jealous.</div>
- <div class='line'>We say that Shore’s wife hath a pretty foot,</div>
- <div class='line'>A cherry lip,</div>
- <div class='line'>A bonny eye, a passing pleasing tongue;</div>
- <div class='line'>That the queen’s kindred are made gentlefolks.</div>
- <div class='line'>How say you, sir? Can you deny all this?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Brakenbury.</em> With this, my lord, myself have nought to do.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Gloucester.</em> What, fellow, naught to do with mistress Shore?</div>
- <div class='line'>I tell you, sir, he that doth naught with her,</div>
- <div class='line'>Excepting one, were best to do it secretly alone.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Brakenbury.</em> What one, my lord?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Gloucester.</em> Her husband, knave—would’st thou betray me?’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The feigned reconciliation of Gloucester with the queen’s kinsmen
-is also a master-piece. One of the finest strokes in the play, and which
-serves to shew as much as any thing the deep, plausible manners of
-Richard, is the unsuspecting security of Hastings, at the very time
-when the former is plotting his death, and when that very appearance
-of cordiality and good-humour on which Hastings builds his confidence
-arises from Richard’s consciousness of having betrayed him to his ruin.
-This, with the whole character of Hastings, is omitted.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Perhaps the two most beautiful passages in the original play are the
-farewell apostrophe of the queen to the Tower, where the children are
-shut up from her, and Tyrrel’s description of their death. We will
-finish our quotations with them.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Queen.</em> Stay, yet look back with me unto the Tower;</div>
- <div class='line'>Pity, you ancient stones, those tender babes,</div>
- <div class='line'>Whom envy hath immured within your walls;</div>
- <div class='line'>Rough cradle for such little pretty ones,</div>
- <div class='line'>Rude, rugged nurse, old sullen play-fellow,</div>
- <div class='line'>For tender princes!’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The other passage is the account of their death by Tyrrel:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Dighton and Forrest, whom I did suborn</div>
- <div class='line'>To do this piece of ruthless butchery,</div>
- <div class='line'>Albeit they were flesh’d villains, bloody dogs,—</div>
- <div class='line'>Melting with tenderness and mild compassion,</div>
- <div class='line'>Wept like to children in their death’s sad story:</div>
- <div class='line'>O thus! quoth Dighton, lay the gentle babes;</div>
- <div class='line'>Thus, thus, quoth Forrest, girdling one another</div>
- <div class='line'>Within their innocent alabaster arms;</div>
- <div class='line'>Their lips were four red roses on a stalk,</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_303'>303</span>And in that summer beauty kissed each other;</div>
- <div class='line'>A book of prayers on their pillow lay,</div>
- <div class='line'>Which once, quoth Forrest, almost changed my mind:</div>
- <div class='line'>But oh the devil!—there the villain stopped;</div>
- <div class='line'>When Dighton thus told on—we smothered</div>
- <div class='line'>The most replenished sweet work of nature,</div>
- <div class='line'>That from the prime creation ere she framed.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>These are some of those wonderful bursts of feeling, done to the
-life, to the very height of fancy and nature, which our Shakespear
-alone could give. We do not insist on the repetition of these last
-passages as proper for the stage: we should indeed be loth to trust
-them in the mouth of almost any actor: but we should wish them to
-be retained in preference at least to the fantoccini exhibition of the
-young princes, Edward and York, bandying childish wit with their
-uncle.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>HENRY VIII.</h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>This play contains little action or violence of passion, yet it has
-considerable interest of a more mild and thoughtful cast, and some of
-the most striking passages in the author’s works. The character of
-Queen Katherine is the most perfect delineation of matronly dignity,
-sweetness, and resignation, that can be conceived. Her appeals to the
-protection of the king, her remonstrances to the cardinals, her conversations
-with her women, shew a noble and generous spirit accompanied
-with the utmost gentleness of nature. What can be more
-affecting than her answer to Campeius and Wolsey, who come to
-visit her as pretended friends.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in8'>——‘Nay, forsooth, my friends,</div>
- <div class='line'>They that must weigh out my afflictions,</div>
- <div class='line'>They that my trust must grow to, live not here;</div>
- <div class='line'>They are, as all my comforts are, far hence,</div>
- <div class='line'>In mine own country, lords.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Dr. Johnson observes of this play, that ‘the meek sorrows and
-virtuous distress of Katherine have furnished some scenes, which may
-be justly numbered among the greatest efforts of tragedy. But the
-genius of Shakespear comes in and goes out with Katherine. Every
-other part may be easily conceived and easily written.’ This is
-easily said; but with all due deference to so great a reputed authority
-as that of Johnson, it is not true. For instance, the scene of
-Buckingham led to execution is one of the most affecting and natural
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_304'>304</span>in Shakespear, and one to which there is hardly an approach in any
-other author. Again, the character of Wolsey, the description of his
-pride and of his fall, are inimitable, and have, besides their gorgeousness
-of effect, a pathos, which only the genius of Shakespear could
-lend to the distresses of a proud, bad man, like Wolsey. There is a
-sort of child-like simplicity in the very helplessness of his situation,
-arising from the recollection of his past overbearing ambition. After
-the cutting sarcasms of his enemies on his disgrace, against which he
-bears up with a spirit conscious of his own superiority, he breaks out
-into that fine apostrophe—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Farewell, a long farewell, to all my greatness!</div>
- <div class='line'>This is the state of man; to-day he puts forth</div>
- <div class='line'>The tender leaves of hope, to-morrow blossoms,</div>
- <div class='line'>And bears his blushing honours thick upon him;</div>
- <div class='line'>The third day comes a frost, a killing frost;</div>
- <div class='line'>And—when he thinks, good easy man, full surely</div>
- <div class='line'>His greatness is a ripening—nips his root,</div>
- <div class='line'>And then he falls, as I do. I have ventur’d,</div>
- <div class='line'>Like little wanton boys that swim on bladders,</div>
- <div class='line'>These many summers in a sea of glory;</div>
- <div class='line'>But far beyond my depth: my high-blown pride</div>
- <div class='line'>At length broke under me; and now has left me,</div>
- <div class='line'>Weary and old with service, to the mercy</div>
- <div class='line'>Of a rude stream, that must for ever hide me.</div>
- <div class='line'>Vain pomp and glory of the world, I hate ye!</div>
- <div class='line'>I feel my heart new open’d: O how wretched</div>
- <div class='line'>Is that poor man, that hangs on princes’ favours!</div>
- <div class='line'>There is betwixt that smile we would aspire to,</div>
- <div class='line'>That sweet aspect of princes, and our ruin,</div>
- <div class='line'>More pangs and fears than war and women have;</div>
- <div class='line'>And when he falls, he falls like Lucifer,</div>
- <div class='line'>Never to hope again!’—</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>There is in this passage, as well as in the well-known dialogue with
-Cromwell which follows, something which stretches beyond commonplace;
-nor is the account which Griffiths gives of Wolsey’s death less
-Shakespearian; and the candour with which Queen Katherine listens
-to the praise of ‘him whom of all men while living she hated most’
-adds the last graceful finishing to her character.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Among other images of great individual beauty might be mentioned
-the description of the effect of Ann Boleyn’s presenting herself to the
-crowd at her coronation.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in14'>——‘While her grace sat down</div>
- <div class='line'>To rest awhile, some half an hour or so,</div>
- <div class='line'>In a rich chair of state, opposing freely</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_305'>305</span>The beauty of her person to the people.</div>
- <div class='line'>Believe me, sir, she is the goodliest woman</div>
- <div class='line'>That ever lay by man. Which when the people</div>
- <div class='line'>Had the full view of, <em>such a noise arose</em></div>
- <div class='line'><em>As the shrouds make at sea in a stiff tempest,</em></div>
- <div class='line'><em>As loud and to as many tunes</em>.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The character of Henry <span class='fss'>VIII.</span> is drawn with great truth and spirit.
-It is like a very disagreeable portrait, sketched by the hand of a
-master. His gross appearance, his blustering demeanour, his vulgarity,
-his arrogance, his sensuality, his cruelty, his hypocrisy, his want of
-common decency and common humanity, are marked in strong lines.
-His traditional peculiarities of expression complete the reality of the
-picture. The authoritative expletive, ‘Ha!’ with which he intimates
-his indignation or surprise, has an effect like the first startling sound
-that breaks from a thunder-cloud. He is of all the monarchs in our
-history the most disgusting: for he unites in himself all the vices of
-barbarism and refinement, without their virtues. Other kings before
-him (such as Richard <span class='fss'>III.</span>) were tyrants and murderers out of ambition
-or necessity: they gained or established unjust power by violent
-means: they destroyed their enemies, or those who barred their
-access to the throne or made its tenure insecure. But Henry <span class='fss'>VIII.</span>‘s
-power is most fatal to those whom he loves: he is cruel and remorseless
-to pamper his luxurious appetites: bloody and voluptuous; an
-amorous murderer; an uxorious debauchee. His hardened insensibility
-to the feelings of others is strengthened by the most profligate
-self-indulgence. The religious hypocrisy, under which he masks his
-cruelty and his lust, is admirably displayed in the speech in which
-he describes the first misgivings of his conscience and its increasing
-throes and terrors, which have induced him to divorce his queen.
-The only thing in his favour in this play is his treatment of Cranmer:
-there is also another circumstance in his favour, which is his patronage
-of Hans Holbein.—It has been said of Shakespear—‘No maid could
-live near such a man.’ It might with as good reason be said—‘No
-king could live near such a man.’ His eye would have penetrated
-through the pomp of circumstance and the veil of opinion. As it
-is, he has represented such persons to the life—his plays are in this
-respect the glass of history—he has done them the same justice as
-if he had been a privy counsellor all his life, and in each successive
-reign. Kings ought never to be seen upon the stage. In the abstract,
-they are very disagreeable characters: it is only while living that they
-are ‘the best of kings.’ It is their power, their splendour, it is the
-apprehension of the personal consequences of their favour or their
-hatred that dazzles the imagination and suspends the judgment of their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_306'>306</span>favourites or their vassals; but death cancels the bond of allegiance
-and of interest; and seen <em>as they were</em>, their power and their pretensions
-look monstrous and ridiculous. The charge brought against
-modern philosophy as inimical to loyalty is unjust, because it might
-as well be brought against other things. No reader of history can
-be a lover of kings. We have often wondered that Henry <span class='fss'>VIII.</span> as he
-is drawn by Shakespear, and as we have seen him represented in all
-the bloated deformity of mind and person, is not hooted from the
-English stage.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>KING JOHN</h3>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='sc'>King John</span> is the last of the historical plays we shall have to speak
-of; and we are not sorry that it is. If we are to indulge our
-imaginations, we had rather do it upon an imaginary theme; if we
-are to find subjects for the exercise of our pity and terror, we prefer
-seeking them in fictitious danger and fictitious distress. It gives a
-<em>soreness</em> to our feelings of indignation or sympathy, when we know
-that in tracing the progress of sufferings and crimes, we are treading
-upon real ground, and recollect that the poet’s dream ‘<em>denoted a foregone
-conclusion</em>‘—irrevocable ills, not conjured up by fancy, but placed
-beyond the reach of poetical justice. That the treachery of King
-John, the death of Arthur, the grief of Constance, had a real truth
-in history, sharpens the sense of pain, while it hangs a leaden weight
-on the heart and the imagination. Something whispers us that we
-have no right to make a mock of calamities like these, or to turn the
-truth of things into the puppet and plaything of our fancies. ‘To
-consider thus’ may be ‘to consider too curiously’; but still we think
-that the actual truth of the particular events, in proportion as we are
-conscious of it, is a drawback on the pleasure as well as the dignity
-of tragedy.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='sc'>King John</span> has all the beauties of language and all the richness of
-the imagination to relieve the painfulness of the subject. The character
-of King John himself is kept pretty much in the background;
-it is only marked in by comparatively slight indications. The crimes
-he is tempted to commit are such as are thrust upon him rather by
-circumstances and opportunity than of his own seeking: he is here
-represented as more cowardly than cruel, and as more contemptible
-than odious. The play embraces only a part of his history. There
-are however few characters on the stage that excite more disgust and
-loathing. He has no intellectual grandeur or strength of character
-to shield him from the indignation which his immediate conduct
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_307'>307</span>provokes: he stands naked and defenceless, in that respect, to the
-worst we can think of him: and besides, we are impelled to put
-the very worst construction on his meanness and cruelty by the tender
-picture of the beauty and helplessness of the object of it, as well as
-by the frantic and heart-rending pleadings of maternal despair. We
-do not forgive him the death of Arthur, because he had too late
-revoked his doom and tried to prevent it; and perhaps because he
-has himself repented of his black design, our <em>moral sense</em> gains courage
-to hate him the more for it. We take him at his word, and think
-his purposes must be odious indeed, when he himself shrinks back
-from them. The scene in which King John suggests to Hubert the
-design of murdering his nephew is a master-piece of dramatic skill,
-but it is still inferior, very inferior to the scene between Hubert and
-Arthur, when the latter learns the orders to put out his eyes. If
-any thing ever was penned, heart-piercing, mixing the extremes of
-terror and pity, of that which shocks and that which soothes the
-mind, it is this scene. We will give it entire, though perhaps it is
-tasking the reader’s sympathy too much.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>‘<em>Enter</em> <span class='sc'>Hubert</span> <em>and Executioner</em>.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Hubert.</em> Heat me these irons hot, and look you stand</div>
- <div class='line'>Within the arras; when I strike my foot</div>
- <div class='line'>Upon the bosom of the ground, rush forth</div>
- <div class='line'>And bind the boy, which you shall find with me,</div>
- <div class='line'>Fast to the chair: be heedful: hence, and watch.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Executioner.</em> I hope your warrant will bear out the deed.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Hubert.</em> Uncleanly scruples! fear not you; look to’t.—</div>
- <div class='line'>Young lad, come forth; I have to say with you.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in20'><em>Enter</em> <span class='sc'>Arthur</span>.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Arthur.</em> Good morrow, Hubert.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Hubert.</em> Morrow, little Prince.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Arthur.</em> As little prince (having so great a title</div>
- <div class='line'>To be more prince) as may be. You are sad.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Hubert.</em> Indeed I have been merrier.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Arthur.</em> Mercy on me!</div>
- <div class='line'>Methinks no body should be sad but I;</div>
- <div class='line'>Yet I remember when I was in France,</div>
- <div class='line'>Young gentlemen would be as sad as night,</div>
- <div class='line'>Only for wantonness. By my Christendom,</div>
- <div class='line'>So were I out of prison, and kept sheep,</div>
- <div class='line'>I should be merry as the day is long.</div>
- <div class='line'>And so I would be here, but that I doubt</div>
- <div class='line'>My uncle practises more harm to me.</div>
- <div class='line'>He is afraid of me, and I of him.</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_308'>308</span>Is it my fault that I was Geoffrey’s son?</div>
- <div class='line'>Indeed it is not, and I would to heav’n</div>
- <div class='line'>I were your son, so you would love me, Hubert.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Hubert.</em> If I talk to him, with his innocent prate</div>
- <div class='line'>He will awake my mercy, which lies dead;</div>
- <div class='line'>Therefore I will be sudden, and dispatch. <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>[<em>Aside.</em><span class='hidev'>|</span></span></div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Arthur.</em> Are you sick, Hubert? you look pale to-day?</div>
- <div class='line'>In sooth, I would you were a little sick,</div>
- <div class='line'>That I might sit all night and watch with you.</div>
- <div class='line'>Alas, I love you more than you do me.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Hubert.</em> His words do take possession of my bosom.</div>
- <div class='line'>Read here, young Arthur— <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>[<em>Shewing a paper.</em><span class='hidev'>|</span></span></div>
- <div class='line'>How now, foolish rheum, <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>[<em>Aside.</em><span class='hidev'>|</span></span></div>
- <div class='line'>Turning dis-piteous torture out of door!</div>
- <div class='line'>I must be brief, lest resolution drop</div>
- <div class='line'>Out at mine eyes in tender womanish tears.—</div>
- <div class='line'>Can you not read it? Is it not fair writ?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Arthur.</em> Too fairly, Hubert, for so foul effect.</div>
- <div class='line'>Must you with irons burn out both mine eyes?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Hubert.</em> Young boy, I must.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Arthur.</em> And will you?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Hubert.</em> And I will.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Arthur.</em> Have you the heart? When your head did but ache,</div>
- <div class='line'>I knit my handkerchief about your brows,</div>
- <div class='line'>(The best I had, a princess wrought it me)</div>
- <div class='line'>And I did never ask it you again;</div>
- <div class='line'>And with my hand at midnight held your head;</div>
- <div class='line'>And like the watchful minutes to the hour,</div>
- <div class='line'>Still and anon chear’d up the heavy time,</div>
- <div class='line'>Saying, what lack you? and where lies your grief?</div>
- <div class='line'>Or, what good love may I perform for you?</div>
- <div class='line'>Many a poor man’s son would have lain still,</div>
- <div class='line'>And ne’er have spoke a loving word to you;</div>
- <div class='line'>But you at your sick service had a prince.</div>
- <div class='line'>Nay, you may think my love was crafty love,</div>
- <div class='line'>And call it cunning. Do, and if you will:</div>
- <div class='line'>If heav’n be pleas’d that you must use me ill,</div>
- <div class='line'>Why then you must——Will you put out mine eyes?</div>
- <div class='line'>These eyes, that never did, and never shall,</div>
- <div class='line'>So much as frown on you?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Hubert.</em> I’ve sworn to do it;</div>
- <div class='line'>And with hot irons must I burn them out.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Arthur.</em> Oh if an angel should have come to me,</div>
- <div class='line'>And told me Hubert should put out mine eyes,</div>
- <div class='line'>I would not have believ’d a tongue but Hubert’s.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Hubert.</em> Come forth; do as I bid you. <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>[<em>Stamps, and the men enter.</em><span class='hidev'>|</span></span></div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Arthur.</em> O save me, Hubert, save me! my eyes are out</div>
- <div class='line'>Ev’n with the fierce looks of these bloody men.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Hubert.</em> Give me the iron, I say, and bind him here.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_309'>309</span><em>Arthur.</em> Alas, what need you be so boist’rous rough?</div>
- <div class='line'>I will not struggle, I will stand stone-still.</div>
- <div class='line'>For heav’n’s sake, Hubert, let me not be bound!</div>
- <div class='line'>Nay, hear me, Hubert! drive these men away,</div>
- <div class='line'>And I will sit as quiet as a lamb:</div>
- <div class='line'>I will not stir, nor wince, nor speak a word,</div>
- <div class='line'>Nor look upon the iron angrily:</div>
- <div class='line'>Thrust but these men away, and I’ll forgive you,</div>
- <div class='line'>Whatever torment you do put me to.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Hubert.</em> Go, stand within; let me alone with him.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Executioner.</em> I am best pleas’d to be from such a deed. <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>[<em>Exit.</em><span class='hidev'>|</span></span></div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Arthur.</em> Alas, I then have chid away my friend.</div>
- <div class='line'>He hath a stern look, but a gentle heart;</div>
- <div class='line'>Let him come back, that his compassion may</div>
- <div class='line'>Give life to yours.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Hubert.</em> Come, boy, prepare yourself.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Arthur.</em> Is there no remedy?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Hubert.</em> None, but to lose your eyes.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Arthur.</em> O heav’n! that there were but a mote in yours,</div>
- <div class='line'>A grain, a dust, a gnat, a wand’ring hair,</div>
- <div class='line'>Any annoyance in that precious sense!</div>
- <div class='line'>Then, feeling what small things are boist’rous there,</div>
- <div class='line'>Your vile intent must needs seem horrible.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Hubert.</em> Is this your promise? go to, hold your tongue.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Arthur.</em> Let me not hold my tongue; let me not, Hubert;</div>
- <div class='line'>Or, Hubert, if you will, cut out my tongue,</div>
- <div class='line'>So I may keep mine eyes. O spare mine eyes!</div>
- <div class='line'>Though to no use, but still to look on you.</div>
- <div class='line'>Lo, by my troth, the instrument is cold,</div>
- <div class='line'>And would not harm me.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Hubert.</em> I can heat it, boy.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Arthur.</em> No, in good sooth, the fire is dead with grief,</div>
- <div class='line'>Being create for comfort, to be us’d</div>
- <div class='line'>In undeserv’d extremes; see else yourself,</div>
- <div class='line'>There is no malice in this burning coal;</div>
- <div class='line'>The breath of heav’n hath blown its spirit out,</div>
- <div class='line'>And strew’d repentant ashes on its head.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Hubert.</em> But with my breath I can revive it, boy.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Arthur.</em> All things that you shall use to do me wrong,</div>
- <div class='line'>Deny their office; only you do lack</div>
- <div class='line'>That mercy which fierce fire and iron extend,</div>
- <div class='line'>Creatures of note for mercy-lacking uses.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Hubert.</em> Well, see to live; I will not touch thine eyes</div>
- <div class='line'>For all the treasure that thine uncle owns:</div>
- <div class='line'>Yet I am sworn, and I did purpose, boy,</div>
- <div class='line'>With this same very iron to burn them out.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Arthur.</em> O, now you look like Hubert. All this while</div>
- <div class='line'>You were disguised.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Hubert.</em> Peace; no more. Adieu,</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_310'>310</span>Your uncle must not know but you are dead.</div>
- <div class='line'>I’ll fill these dogged spies with false reports:</div>
- <div class='line'>And, pretty child, sleep doubtless and secure,</div>
- <div class='line'>That Hubert, for the wealth of all the world,</div>
- <div class='line'>Will not offend thee.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Arthur.</em> O heav’n! I thank you, Hubert.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Hubert.</em> Silence, no more; go closely in with me;</div>
- <div class='line'>Much danger do I undergo for thee. <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>[<em>Exeunt.</em>’<span class='hidev'>|</span></span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>His death afterwards, when he throws himself from his prison
-walls, excites the utmost pity for his innocence and friendless situation,
-and well justifies the exaggerated denunciations of Falconbridge to
-Hubert, whom he suspects wrongfully of the deed.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘There is not yet so ugly a fiend of hell</div>
- <div class='line'>As thou shalt be, if thou did’st kill this child.</div>
- <div class='line'>—If thou did’st but consent</div>
- <div class='line'>To this most cruel act, do but despair:</div>
- <div class='line'>And if thou want’st a cord, the smallest thread</div>
- <div class='line'>That ever spider twisted from her womb</div>
- <div class='line'>Will strangle thee; a rush will be a beam</div>
- <div class='line'>To hang thee on: or would’st thou drown thyself,</div>
- <div class='line'>Put but a little water in a spoon,</div>
- <div class='line'>And it shall be as all the ocean,</div>
- <div class='line'>Enough to stifle such a villain up.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The excess of maternal tenderness, rendered desperate by the
-fickleness of friends and the injustice of fortune, and made stronger
-in will, in proportion to the want of all other power, was never more
-finely expressed than in Constance. The dignity of her answer to
-King Philip, when she refuses to accompany his messenger, ‘To me
-and to the state of my great grief, let kings assemble,’ her indignant
-reproach to Austria for deserting her cause, her invocation to death,
-‘that love of misery,’ however fine and spirited, all yield to the beauty
-of the passage, where, her passion subsiding into tenderness, she
-addresses the Cardinal in these words:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Oh father Cardinal, I have heard you say</div>
- <div class='line'>That we shall see and know our friends in heav’n:</div>
- <div class='line'>If that be, I shall see my boy again,</div>
- <div class='line'>For since the birth of Cain, the first male child,</div>
- <div class='line'>To him that did but yesterday suspire,</div>
- <div class='line'>There was not such a gracious creature born.</div>
- <div class='line'>But now will canker-sorrow eat my bud,</div>
- <div class='line'>And chase the native beauty from his cheek,</div>
- <div class='line'>And he will look as hollow as a ghost,</div>
- <div class='line'>As dim and meagre as an ague’s fit,</div>
- <div class='line'>And so he’ll die; and rising so again,</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_311'>311</span>When I shall meet him in the court of heav’n,</div>
- <div class='line'>I shall not know him; therefore never, never</div>
- <div class='line'>Must I behold my pretty Arthur more.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>K. Philip.</em> You are as fond of grief as of your child.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Constance.</em> Grief fills the room up of my absent child:</div>
- <div class='line'>Lies in his bed, walks up and down with me;</div>
- <div class='line'>Puts on his pretty looks, repeats his words,</div>
- <div class='line'>Remembers me of all his gracious parts;</div>
- <div class='line'>Stuffs out his vacant garments with his form.</div>
- <div class='line'>Then have I reason to be fond of grief.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The contrast between the mild resignation of Queen Katherine to her
-own wrongs, and the wild, uncontroulable affliction of Constance
-for the wrongs which she sustains as a mother, is no less naturally
-conceived than it is ably sustained throughout these two wonderful
-characters.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The accompaniment of the comic character of the Bastard was
-well chosen to relieve the poignant agony of suffering, and the cold
-cowardly policy of behaviour in the principal characters of this play.
-Its spirit, invention, volubility of tongue and forwardness in action,
-are unbounded. <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Aliquando sufflaminandus erat</span></i>, says Ben Jonson of
-Shakespear. But we should be sorry if Ben Jonson had been his
-licenser. We prefer the heedless magnanimity of his wit infinitely
-to all Jonson’s laborious caution. The character of the Bastard’s
-comic humour is the same in essence as that of other comic characters
-in Shakespear; they always run on with good things and are never
-exhausted; they are always daring and successful. They have words
-at will, and a flow of wit like a flow of animal spirits. The difference
-between Falconbridge and the others is that he is a soldier, and
-brings his wit to bear upon action, is courageous with his sword as
-well as tongue, and stimulates his gallantry by his jokes, his enemies
-feeling the sharpness of his blows and the sting of his sarcasms at the
-same time. Among his happiest sallies are his descanting on the
-composition of his own person, his invective against ‘commodity,
-tickling commodity,’ and his expression of contempt for the Archduke
-of Austria, who had killed his father, which begins in jest but
-ends in serious earnest. His conduct at the siege of Angiers shews
-that his resources were not confined to verbal retorts.—The same
-exposure of the policy of courts and camps, of kings, nobles, priests,
-and cardinals, takes place here as in the other plays we have gone
-through, and we shall not go into a disgusting repetition.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This, like the other plays taken from English history, is written
-in a remarkably smooth and flowing style, very different from some
-of the tragedies, <cite>Macbeth</cite>, for instance. The passages consist of a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_312'>312</span>series of single lines, not running into one another. This peculiarity
-in the versification, which is most common in the three parts of
-<cite>Henry VI.</cite> has been assigned as a reason why those plays were not
-written by Shakespear. But the same structure of verse occurs in
-his other undoubted plays, as in <cite>Richard II.</cite> and in <span class='sc'>King John</span>.
-The following are instances:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘That daughter there of Spain, the lady Blanch,</div>
- <div class='line'>Is near to England; look upon the years</div>
- <div class='line'>Of Lewis the dauphin, and that lovely maid.</div>
- <div class='line'>If lusty love should go in quest of beauty,</div>
- <div class='line'>Where should he find it fairer than in Blanch?</div>
- <div class='line'>If zealous love should go in search of virtue,</div>
- <div class='line'>Where should he find it purer than in Blanch?</div>
- <div class='line'>If love ambitious sought a match of birth,</div>
- <div class='line'>Whose veins bound richer blood than lady Blanch?</div>
- <div class='line'>Such as she is, in beauty, virtue, birth,</div>
- <div class='line'>Is the young dauphin every way complete:</div>
- <div class='line'>If not complete of, say he is not she;</div>
- <div class='line'>And she again wants nothing, to name want,</div>
- <div class='line'>If want it be not, that she is not he.</div>
- <div class='line'>He is the half part of a blessed man,</div>
- <div class='line'>Left to be finished by such as she;</div>
- <div class='line'>And she a fair divided excellence,</div>
- <div class='line'>Whose fulness of perfection lies in him.</div>
- <div class='line'>O, two such silver currents, when they join,</div>
- <div class='line'>Do glorify the banks that bound them in:</div>
- <div class='line'>And two such shores to two such streams made one,</div>
- <div class='line'>Two such controuling bounds, shall you be, kings,</div>
- <div class='line'>To these two princes, if you marry them.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Another instance, which is certainly very happy as an example
-of the simple enumeration of a number of particulars, is Salisbury’s
-remonstrance against the second crowning of the king.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Therefore to be possessed with double pomp,</div>
- <div class='line'>To guard a title that was rich before;</div>
- <div class='line'>To gild refined gold, to paint the lily,</div>
- <div class='line'>To throw a perfume on the violet,</div>
- <div class='line'>To smooth the ice, to add another hue</div>
- <div class='line'>Unto the rainbow, or with taper light</div>
- <div class='line'>To seek the beauteous eye of heav’n to garnish;</div>
- <div class='line'>Is wasteful and ridiculous excess.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_313'>313</span>
- <h3 class='c010'>TWELFTH NIGHT; OR, WHAT YOU WILL</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>This is justly considered as one of the most delightful of Shakespear’s
-comedies. It is full of sweetness and pleasantry. It is perhaps too
-good-natured for comedy. It has little satire, and no spleen. It
-aims at the ludicrous rather than the ridiculous. It makes us laugh
-at the follies of mankind, not despise them, and still less bear any
-ill-will towards them. Shakespear’s comic genius resembles the bee
-rather in its power of extracting sweets from weeds or poisons, than
-in leaving a sting behind it. He gives the most amusing exaggeration
-of the prevailing foibles of his characters, but in a way that they
-themselves, instead of being offended at, would almost join in to
-humour; he rather contrives opportunities for them to shew themselves
-off in the happiest lights, than renders them contemptible in
-the perverse construction of the wit or malice of others.—There is
-a certain stage of society in which people become conscious of their
-peculiarities and absurdities, affect to disguise what they are, and set
-up pretensions to what they are not. This gives rise to a corresponding
-style of comedy, the object of which is to detect the disguises
-of self-love, and to make reprisals on these preposterous assumptions
-of vanity, by marking the contrast between the real and the affected
-character as severely as possible, and denying to those, who would
-impose on us for what they are not, even the merit which they have.
-This is the comedy of artificial life, of wit and satire, such as we
-see it in Congreve, Wycherley, Vanbrugh, etc. To this succeeds
-a state of society from which the same sort of affectation and pretence
-are banished by a greater knowledge of the world or by their successful
-exposure on the stage; and which by neutralising the materials
-of comic character, both natural and artificial, leaves no comedy at
-all—but <em>the sentimental</em>. Such is our modern comedy. There is a
-period in the progress of manners anterior to both these, in which
-the foibles and follies of individuals are of nature’s planting, not the
-growth of art or study; in which they are therefore unconscious of
-them themselves, or care not who knows them, if they can but have
-their whim out; and in which, as there is no attempt at imposition,
-the spectators rather receive pleasure from humouring the inclinations
-of the persons they laugh at, than wish to give them pain by exposing
-their absurdity. This may be called the comedy of nature, and it is
-the comedy which we generally find in Shakespear.—Whether the
-analysis here given be just or not, the spirit of his comedies is evidently
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_314'>314</span>quite distinct from that of the authors above mentioned, as it is in its
-essence the same with that of Cervantes, and also very frequently of
-Molière, though he was more systematic in his extravagance than
-Shakespear. Shakespear’s comedy is of a pastoral and poetical cast.
-Folly is indigenous to the soil, and shoots out with native, happy,
-unchecked luxuriance. Absurdity has every encouragement afforded
-it; and nonsense has room to flourish in. Nothing is stunted by the
-churlish, icy hand of indifference or severity. The poet runs riot in
-a conceit, and idolises a quibble. His whole object is to turn the
-meanest or rudest objects to a pleasurable account. The relish which
-he has of a pun, or of the quaint humour of a low character, does not
-interfere with the delight with which he describes a beautiful image,
-or the most refined love. The clown’s forced jests do not spoil the
-sweetness of the character of Viola; the same house is big enough to
-hold Malvolio, the Countess, Maria, Sir Toby, and Sir Andrew
-Ague-cheek. For instance, nothing can fall much lower than this
-last character in intellect or morals: yet how are his weaknesses
-nursed and dandled by Sir Toby into something ‘high fantastical,’
-when on Sir Andrew’s commendation of himself for dancing and
-fencing, Sir Toby answers—‘Wherefore are these things hid?
-Wherefore have these gifts a curtain before them? Are they like to
-take dust like mistress Moll’s picture? Why dost thou not go to
-church in a galliard, and come home in a coranto? My very walk
-should be a jig! I would not so much as make water but in a
-cinque-pace. What dost thou mean? Is this a world to hide virtues
-in? I did think by the excellent constitution of thy leg, it was
-framed under the star of a galliard!’—How Sir Toby, Sir Andrew,
-and the Clown afterwards <em>chirp over their cups</em>, how they ‘rouse the
-night-owl in a catch, able to draw three souls out of one weaver!’
-What can be better than Sir Toby’s unanswerable answer to Malvolio,
-‘Dost thou think, because thou art virtuous, there shall be no more
-cakes and ale?’—In a word, the best turn is given to every thing,
-instead of the worst. There is a constant infusion of the romantic
-and enthusiastic, in proportion as the characters are natural and
-sincere: whereas, in the more artificial style of comedy, every thing
-gives way to ridicule and indifference, there being nothing left but
-affectation on one side, and incredulity on the other.—Much as we
-like Shakespear’s comedies, we cannot agree with Dr. Johnson that
-they are better than his tragedies; nor do we like them half so well.
-If his inclination to comedy sometimes led him to trifle with the
-seriousness of tragedy, the poetical and impassioned passages are the
-best parts of his comedies. The great and secret charm of <span class='sc'>Twelfth
-Night</span> is the character of Viola. Much as we like catches and cakes
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_315'>315</span>and ale, there is something that we like better. We have a friendship
-for Sir Toby; we patronise Sir Andrew; we have an understanding
-with the Clown, a sneaking kindness for Maria and her rogueries; we
-feel a regard for Malvolio, and sympathise with his gravity, his smiles,
-his cross garters, his yellow stockings, and imprisonment in the stocks.
-But there is something that excites in us a stronger feeling than all
-this—it is Viola’s confession of her love.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Duke.</em> What’s her history?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Viola.</em> <em>A blank, my lord, she never told her love</em>:</div>
- <div class='line'>She let concealment, like a worm i’ th’ bud,</div>
- <div class='line'>Feed on her damask cheek: she pin’d in thought,</div>
- <div class='line'>And with a green and yellow melancholy,</div>
- <div class='line'>She sat like Patience on a monument,</div>
- <div class='line'>Smiling at grief. <em>Was not this love indeed?</em></div>
- <div class='line'>We men may say more, swear more, but indeed,</div>
- <div class='line'>Our shews are more than will; for still we prove</div>
- <div class='line'>Much in our vows, but little in our love.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Duke.</em> But died thy sister of her love, my boy?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Viola.</em> I am all the daughters of my father’s house,</div>
- <div class='line'>And all the brothers too;—and yet I know not.’—</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Shakespear alone could describe the effect of his own poetry.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Oh, it came o’er the ear like the sweet south</div>
- <div class='line'>That breathes upon a bank of violets,</div>
- <div class='line'>Stealing and giving odour.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>What we so much admire here is not the image of Patience on a
-monument, which has been generally quoted, but the lines before and
-after it. ‘They give a very echo to the seat where love is throned.’
-How long ago it is since we first learnt to repeat them; and still, still
-they vibrate on the heart, like the sounds which the passing wind
-draws from the trembling strings of a harp left on some desert shore!
-There are other passages of not less impassioned sweetness. Such is
-Olivia’s address to Sebastian, whom she supposes to have already
-deceived her in a promise of marriage.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Blame not this haste of mine: if you mean well,</div>
- <div class='line'>Now go with me and with this holy man</div>
- <div class='line'>Into the chantry by: there before him,</div>
- <div class='line'>And underneath that consecrated roof,</div>
- <div class='line'>Plight me the full assurance of your faith,</div>
- <div class='line'><em>That my most jealous and too doubtful soul</em></div>
- <div class='line'><em>May live at peace</em>.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>We have already said something of Shakespear’s songs. One of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_316'>316</span>the most beautiful of them occurs in this play, with a preface of his
-own to it.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Duke.</em> O fellow, come, the song we had last night.</div>
- <div class='line'>Mark it, Cesario, it is old and plain;</div>
- <div class='line'>The spinsters and the knitters in the sun,</div>
- <div class='line'>And the free maids that weave their thread with bones,</div>
- <div class='line'>Do use to chaunt it: it is silly sooth,</div>
- <div class='line'>And dallies with the innocence of love,</div>
- <div class='line'>Like the old age.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in18'>SONG.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>Come away, come away, death,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>And in sad cypress let me be laid;</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Fly away, fly away, breath;</div>
- <div class='line in2'>I am slain by a fair cruel maid.</div>
- <div class='line in2'>My shroud of white, stuck all with yew,</div>
- <div class='line in8'>O prepare it;</div>
- <div class='line in2'>My part of death no one so true</div>
- <div class='line in8'>Did share it.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>Not a flower, not a flower sweet,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>On my black coffin let there be strewn;</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Not a friend, not a friend greet</div>
- <div class='line in2'>My poor corpse, where my bones shall be thrown:</div>
- <div class='line in4'>A thousand thousand sighs to save,</div>
- <div class='line in8'>Lay me, O! where</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Sad true-love never find my grave,</div>
- <div class='line in8'>To weep there.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Who after this will say that Shakespear’s genius was only fitted for
-comedy? Yet after reading other parts of this play, and particularly
-the garden-scene where Malvolio picks up the letter, if we were to
-say that his genius for comedy was less than his genius for tragedy,
-it would perhaps only prove that our own taste in such matters is more
-saturnine than mercurial.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c013'>
- <div>‘<em>Enter</em> <span class='sc'>Maria</span>.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Sir Toby.</em> Here comes the little villain:—How now, my nettle of India?</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Maria.</em> Get ye all three into the box-tree: Malvolio’s coming down
-this walk: he has been yonder i’ the sun, practising behaviour to his own
-shadow this half hour: observe him, for the love of mockery; for I know
-this letter will make a contemplative idiot of him. Close, in the name of
-jesting! Lie thou there; for here come’s the trout that must be caught
-with tickling.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>[<em>They hide themselves. Maria throws down a letter, and Exit.</em></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c013'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_317'>317</span><em>Enter</em> <span class='sc'>Malvolio</span>.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Malvolio.</em> ’Tis but fortune; all is fortune. Maria once told me, she did
-affect me; and I have heard herself come thus near, that, should she fancy,
-it should be one of my complexion. Besides, she uses me with a more
-exalted respect than any one else that follows her. What should I think on’t?</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Sir Toby.</em> Here’s an over-weening rogue!</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Fabian.</em> O, peace! Contemplation makes a rare turkey-cock of him;
-how he jets under his advanced plumes!</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Sir Andrew.</em> ‘Slight, I could so beat the rogue:—</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Sir Toby.</em> Peace, I say.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Malvolio.</em> To be count Malvolio;—</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Sir Toby.</em> Ah, rogue!</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Sir Andrew.</em> Pistol him, pistol him.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Sir Toby.</em> Peace, peace!</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Malvolio.</em> There is example for’t; the lady of the Strachy married the
-yeoman of the wardrobe.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Sir Andrew.</em> Fie on him, Jezebel!</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Fabian.</em> O, peace! now he’s deeply in; look, how imagination blows him.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Malvolio.</em> Having been three months married to her, sitting in my chair
-of state,——</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Sir Toby.</em> O for a stone bow, to hit him in the eye!</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Malvolio.</em> Calling my officers about me, in my branch’d velvet gown;
-having come from a day-bed, where I have left Olivia sleeping.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Sir Toby.</em> Fire and brimstone!</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Fabian.</em> O peace, peace!</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Malvolio.</em> And then to have the humour of state: and after a demure
-travel of regard,——telling them, I know my place, as I would they should
-do theirs,—to ask for my kinsman Toby.——</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Sir Toby.</em> Bolts and shackles!</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Fabian.</em> O, peace, peace, peace! now, now.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Malvolio.</em> Seven of my people, with an obedient start, make out for him;
-I frown the while; and, perchance, wind up my watch, or play with some
-rich jewel. Toby approaches; curtsies there to me.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Sir Toby.</em> Shall this fellow live?</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Fabian.</em> Though our silence be drawn from us with cares, yet peace.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Malvolio.</em> I extend my hand to him thus, quenching my familiar smile
-with an austere regard to controul.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Sir Toby.</em> And does not Toby take you a blow o’ the lips then?</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Malvolio.</em> Saying—Cousin Toby, my fortunes having cast me on your
-niece, give me this prerogative of speech;—</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Sir Toby.</em> What, what?</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Malvolio.</em> You must amend your drunkenness.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Fabian.</em> Nay, patience, or we break the sinews of our plot.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Malvolio.</em> Besides, you waste the treasure of your time with a foolish
-knight—</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Sir Andrew.</em> That’s me, I warrant you.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Malvolio.</em> One Sir Andrew——</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Sir Andrew.</em> I knew, ’twas I; for many do call me fool.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Malvolio.</em> What employment have we here? <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>[<em>Taking up the letter.</em>’<span class='hidev'>|</span></span></p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_318'>318</span>The letter and his comments on it are equally good. If poor
-Malvolio’s treatment afterwards is a little hard, poetical justice is done
-in the uneasiness which Olivia suffers on account of her mistaken
-attachment to Cesario, as her insensibility to the violence of the
-Duke’s passion is atoned for by the discovery of Viola’s concealed
-love of him.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>THE TWO GENTLEMEN OF VERONA</h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>This is little more than the first outlines of a comedy loosely sketched
-in. It is the story of a novel dramatised with very little labour or
-pretension; yet there are passages of high poetical spirit, and of
-inimitable quaintness of humour, which are undoubtedly Shakespear’s,
-and there is throughout the conduct of the fable a careless grace and
-felicity which marks it for his. One of the editors (we believe Mr.
-Pope) remarks in a marginal note to the <span class='sc'>Two Gentlemen of Verona</span>—</p>
-
-<p class='c016'>‘It is observable (I know not for what cause) that the style of this
-comedy is less figurative, and more natural and unaffected than the greater
-part of this author’s, though supposed to be one of the first he wrote.’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Yet so little does the editor appear to have made up his mind upon
-this subject, that we find the following note to the very next (the
-second) scene.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'>‘This whole scene, like many others in these plays (some of which I
-believe were written by Shakespear, and others interpolated by the players)
-is composed of the lowest and most trifling conceits, to be accounted for
-only by the gross taste of the age he lived in: <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Populo ut placerent</span></i>. I wish
-I had authority to leave them out, but I have done all I could, set a mark
-of reprobation upon them, throughout this edition.’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is strange that our fastidious critic should fall so soon from praising
-to reprobating. The style of the familiar parts of this comedy is
-indeed made up of conceits—low they may be for what we know,
-but then they are not poor, but rich ones. The scene of Launce
-with his dog (not that in the second, but that in the fourth act) is a
-perfect treat in the way of farcical drollery and invention; nor do
-we think Speed’s manner of proving his master to be in love deficient
-in wit or sense, though the style may be criticised as not simple
-enough for the modern taste.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'>‘<em>Valentine.</em> Why, how know you that I am in love?</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Speed.</em> Marry, by these special marks: first, you have learned, like
-Sir Protheus, to wreathe your arms like a malcontent, to relish a love-song
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_319'>319</span>like a robin-red-breast, to walk alone like one that had the pestilence, to
-sigh like a school-boy that had lost his ABC, to weep like a young wench
-that had buried her grandam, to fast like one that takes diet, to watch like
-one that fears robbing, to speak puling like a beggar at Hallowmas. You
-were wont, when you laughed, to crow like a cock; when you walked, to
-walk like one of the lions; when you fasted, it was presently after dinner;
-when you looked sadly, it was for want of money; and now you are metamorphosed
-with a mistress, that when I look on you, I can hardly think
-you my master.’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The tender scenes in this play, though not so highly wrought as in
-some others, have often much sweetness of sentiment and expression.
-There is something pretty and playful in the conversation of Julia
-with her maid, when she shews such a disposition to coquetry about
-receiving the letter from Protheus; and her behaviour afterwards and
-her disappointment, when she finds him faithless to his vows, remind
-us at a distance of Imogen’s tender constancy. Her answer to
-Lucetta, who advises her against following her lover in disguise, is a
-beautiful piece of poetry.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Lucetta.</em> I do not seek to quench your love’s hot fire,</div>
- <div class='line'>But qualify the fire’s extremest rage,</div>
- <div class='line'>Lest it should burn above the bounds of reason.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Julia.</em> The more thou damm’st it up, the more it burns;</div>
- <div class='line'>The current that with gentle murmur glides,</div>
- <div class='line'>Thou know’st, being stopp’d, impatiently doth rage;</div>
- <div class='line'>But when his fair course is not hindered,</div>
- <div class='line'>He makes sweet music with th’ enamell’d stones,</div>
- <div class='line'>Giving a gentle kiss to every sedge</div>
- <div class='line'>He overtaketh in his pilgrimage:</div>
- <div class='line'>And so by many winding nooks he strays,</div>
- <div class='line'>With willing sport, to the wild ocean.<a id='r70' /><a href='#f70' class='c012'><sup>[70]</sup></a></div>
- <div class='line'>Then let me go, and hinder not my course;</div>
- <div class='line'>I’ll be as patient as a gentle stream,</div>
- <div class='line'>And make a pastime of each weary step,</div>
- <div class='line'>Till the last step have brought me to my love;</div>
- <div class='line'>And there I’ll rest, as after much turmoil,</div>
- <div class='line'>A blessed soul doth in Elysium.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>If Shakespear indeed had written only this and other passages in the
-<span class='sc'>Two Gentlemen of Verona</span>, he would <em>almost</em> have deserved Milton’s
-praise of him—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘And sweetest Shakespear, Fancy’s child,</div>
- <div class='line'>Warbles his native wood-notes wild.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>But as it is, he deserves rather more praise than this.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_320'>320</span>
- <h3 class='c010'>THE MERCHANT OF VENICE</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>This is a play that in spite of the change of manners and prejudices
-still holds undisputed possession of the stage. Shakespear’s malignant
-has outlived Mr. Cumberland’s benevolent Jew. In proportion as
-Shylock has ceased to be a popular bugbear, ‘baited with the rabble’s
-curse,’ he becomes a half-favourite with the philosophical part of the
-audience, who are disposed to think that Jewish revenge is at least as
-good as Christian injuries. Shylock is <em>a good hater</em>; ‘a man no less
-sinned against than sinning.’ If he carries his revenge too far, yet
-he has strong grounds for ‘the lodged hate he bears Anthonio,’ which
-he explains with equal force of eloquence and reason. He seems the
-depositary of the vengeance of his race; and though the long habit of
-brooding over daily insults and injuries has crusted over his temper
-with inveterate misanthropy, and hardened him against the contempt
-of mankind, this adds but little to the triumphant pretensions of his
-enemies. There is a strong, quick, and deep sense of justice mixed
-up with the gall and bitterness of his resentment. The constant
-apprehension of being burnt alive, plundered, banished, reviled, and
-trampled on, might be supposed to sour the most forbearing nature,
-and to take something from that ‘milk of human kindness,’ with
-which his persecutors contemplated his indignities. The desire of
-revenge is almost inseparable from the sense of wrong; and we can
-hardly help sympathising with the proud spirit, hid beneath his
-‘Jewish gaberdine,’ stung to madness by repeated undeserved provocations,
-and labouring to throw off the load of obloquy and
-oppression heaped upon him and all his tribe by one desperate act of
-‘lawful’ revenge, till the ferociousness of the means by which he is
-to execute his purpose, and the pertinacity with which he adheres to
-it, turn us against him; but even at last, when disappointed of the
-sanguinary revenge with which he had glutted his hopes, and exposed
-to beggary and contempt by the letter of the law on which he had
-insisted with so little remorse, we pity him, and think him hardly
-dealt with by his judges. In all his answers and retorts upon his
-adversaries, he has the best not only of the argument but of the question,
-reasoning on their own principles and practice. They are so far
-from allowing of any measure of equal dealing, of common justice or
-humanity between themselves and the Jew, that even when they come
-to ask a favour of him, and Shylock reminds them that ‘on such a
-day they spit upon him, another spurned him, another called him dog,
-and for these curtesies request he’ll lend them so much monies’—Anthonio,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_321'>321</span>his old enemy, instead of any acknowledgment of the
-shrewdness and justice of his remonstrance, which would have been
-preposterous in a respectable Catholic merchant in those times,
-threatens him with a repetition of the same treatment—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘I am as like to call thee so again,</div>
- <div class='line'>To spit on thee again, to spurn thee too.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>After this, the appeal to the Jew’s mercy, as if there were any
-common principle of right and wrong between them, is the rankest
-hypocrisy, or the blindest prejudice; and the Jew’s answer to one of
-Anthonio’s friends, who asks him what his pound of forfeit flesh is
-good for, is irresistible—</p>
-
-<p class='c016'>To bait fish withal; if it will feed nothing else, it will feed my revenge.
-He hath disgrac’d me, and hinder’d me of half a million, laughed at my
-losses, mock’d at my gains, scorn’d my nation, thwarted my bargains,
-cool’d my friends, heated mine enemies; and what’s his reason? I am
-a Jew. Hath not a Jew eyes; hath not a Jew hands, organs, dimensions,
-senses, affections, passions; fed with the same food, hurt with the same
-weapons, subject to the same diseases, healed by the same means, warmed
-and cooled by the same winter and summer that a Christian is? If you
-prick us, do we not bleed? If you tickle us, do we not laugh? If you
-poison us, do we not die? And if you wrong us, shall we not revenge?
-If we are like you in the rest, we will resemble you in that. If a Jew
-wrong a Christian, what is his humility? revenge. If a Christian wrong
-a Jew, what should his sufferance be by Christian example? why revenge.
-The villainy you teach me I will execute, and it shall go hard but I will
-better the instruction.’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The whole of the trial-scene, both before and after the entrance of
-Portia, is a master-piece of dramatic skill. The legal acuteness, the
-passionate declamations, the sound maxims of jurisprudence, the wit
-and irony interspersed in it, the fluctuations of hope and fear in the
-different persons, and the completeness and suddenness of the catastrophe,
-cannot be surpassed. Shylock, who is his own counsel,
-defends himself well, and is triumphant on all the general topics that
-are urged against him, and only fails through a legal flaw. Take the
-following as an instance:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Shylock.</em> What judgment shall I dread, doing no wrong?</div>
- <div class='line'>You have among you many a purchas’d slave,</div>
- <div class='line'>Which like your asses, and your dogs, and mules,</div>
- <div class='line'>You use in abject and in slavish part,</div>
- <div class='line'>Because you bought them:—shall I say to you,</div>
- <div class='line'>Let them be free, marry them to your heirs?</div>
- <div class='line'>Why sweat they under burdens? let their beds</div>
- <div class='line'>Be made as soft as yours, and let their palates</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_322'>322</span>Be season’d with such viands? you will answer,</div>
- <div class='line'>The slaves are ours:—so do I answer you:</div>
- <div class='line'>The pound of flesh, which I demand of him,</div>
- <div class='line'>Is dearly bought, is mine, and I will have it:</div>
- <div class='line'>If you deny me, fie upon your law!</div>
- <div class='line'>There is no force in the decrees of Venice:</div>
- <div class='line'>I stand for judgment: answer; shall I have it?’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The keenness of his revenge awakes all his faculties; and he beats
-back all opposition to his purpose, whether grave or gay, whether of
-wit or argument, with an equal degree of earnestness and self-possession.
-His character is displayed as distinctly in other less
-prominent parts of the play, and we may collect from a few sentences
-the history of his life—his descent and origin, his thrift and domestic
-economy, his affection for his daughter, whom he loves next to his
-wealth, his courtship and his first present to Leah, his wife! ‘I
-would not have parted with it’ (the ring which he first gave her)
-‘for a wilderness of monkies!’ What a fine Hebraism is implied in
-this expression!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Portia is not a very great favourite with us; neither are we in love
-with her maid, Nerissa. Portia has a certain degree of affectation
-and pedantry about her, which is very unusual in Shakespear’s
-women, but which perhaps was a proper qualification for the office
-of a ‘civil doctor,’ which she undertakes and executes so successfully.
-The speech about Mercy is very well; but there are a thousand finer
-ones in Shakespear. We do not admire the scene of the caskets:
-and object entirely to the Black Prince, Morocchius. We should
-like Jessica better if she had not deceived and robbed her father, and
-Lorenzo, if he had not married a Jewess, though he thinks he
-has a right to wrong a Jew. The dialogue between this newly-married
-couple by moonlight, beginning ‘On such a night,’ etc. is a
-collection of classical elegancies. Launcelot, the Jew’s man, is an
-honest fellow. The dilemma in which he describes himself placed
-between his ‘conscience and the fiend,’ the one of which advises him
-to run away from his master’s service and the other to stay in it, is
-exquisitely humourous.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Gratiano is a very admirable subordinate character. He is the
-jester of the piece: yet one speech of his, in his own defence, contains
-a whole volume of wisdom.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Anthonio.</em> I hold the world but as the world, Gratiano,</div>
- <div class='line'>A stage, where every one must play his part;</div>
- <div class='line'>And mine a sad one.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Gratiano.</em> Let me play the fool:</div>
- <div class='line'>With mirth and laughter let old wrinkles come;</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_323'>323</span>And let my liver rather heat with wine,</div>
- <div class='line'>Than my heart cool with mortifying groans.</div>
- <div class='line'>Why should a man, whose blood is warm within,</div>
- <div class='line'>Sit like his grandsire cut in alabaster?</div>
- <div class='line'>Sleep when he wakes? and creep into the jaundice</div>
- <div class='line'>By being peevish? I tell thee what, Anthonio—</div>
- <div class='line'>I love thee, and it is my love that speaks;—</div>
- <div class='line'>There are a sort of men, whose visages</div>
- <div class='line'>Do cream and mantle like a standing pond:</div>
- <div class='line'>And do a wilful stillness entertain,</div>
- <div class='line'>With purpose to be drest in an opinion</div>
- <div class='line'>Of wisdom, gravity, profound conceit;</div>
- <div class='line'>As who should say, <em>I am Sir Oracle,</em></div>
- <div class='line'><em>And when I ope my lips, let no dog bark</em>!</div>
- <div class='line'>O, my Anthonio, I do know of these,</div>
- <div class='line'>That therefore only are reputed wise,</div>
- <div class='line'>For saying nothing; who, I am very sure,</div>
- <div class='line'>If they should speak, would almost damn those ears,</div>
- <div class='line'>Which hearing them, would call their brothers, fools.</div>
- <div class='line'>I’ll tell thee more of this another time:</div>
- <div class='line'>But fish not with this melancholy bait,</div>
- <div class='line'>For this fool’s gudgeon, this opinion,’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Gratiano’s speech on the philosophy of love, and the effect of habit
-in taking off the force of passion, is as full of spirit and good sense.
-The graceful winding up of this play in the fifth act, after the tragic
-business is despatched, is one of the happiest instances of Shakespear’s
-knowledge of the principles of the drama. We do not mean the
-pretended quarrel between Portia and Nerissa and their husbands
-about the rings, which is amusing enough, but the conversation just
-before and after the return of Portia to her own house, beginning
-‘How sweet the moonlight sleeps upon this bank,’ and ending ‘Peace!
-how the moon sleeps with Endymion, and would not be awaked.’
-There is a number of beautiful thoughts crowded into that short
-space, and linked together by the most natural transitions.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>When we first went to see Mr. Kean in Shylock, we expected to
-see, what we had been used to see, a decrepid old man, bent with
-age and ugly with mental deformity, grinning with deadly malice,
-with the venom of his heart congealed in the expression of his countenance,
-sullen, morose, gloomy, inflexible, brooding over one idea,
-that of his hatred, and fixed on one unalterable purpose, that of his
-revenge. We were disappointed, because we had taken our idea from
-other actors, not from the play. There is no proof there that
-Shylock is old, but a single line, ‘Bassanio and <em>old</em> Shylock, both
-stand forth,’—which does not imply that he is infirm with age—and
-the circumstance that he has a daughter marriageable, which does
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_324'>324</span>not imply that he is old at all. It would be too much to say that
-his body should be made crooked and deformed to answer to his
-mind, which is bowed down and warped with prejudices and passion.
-That he has but one idea, is not true; he has more ideas than any
-other person in the piece; and if he is intense and inveterate in the
-pursuit of his purpose, he shews the utmost elasticity, vigour, and
-presence of mind, in the means of attaining it. But so rooted was
-our habitual impression of the part from seeing it caricatured in the
-representation, that it was only from a careful perusal of the play itself
-that we saw our error. The stage is not in general the best place to
-study our author’s characters in. It is too often filled with traditional
-common-place conceptions of the part, handed down from sire to son,
-and suited to the taste of <em>the great vulgar and the small</em>.—‘’Tis an
-unweeded garden: things rank and gross do merely gender in it!’
-If a man of genius comes once in an age to clear away the rubbish,
-to make it fruitful and wholesome, they cry, ‘’Tis a bad school: it
-may be like nature, it may be like Shakespear, but it is not like us.’
-Admirable critics!</p>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>THE WINTER’S TALE</h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>We wonder that Mr. Pope should have entertained doubts of the
-genuineness of this play. He was, we suppose, shocked (as a certain
-critic suggests) at the Chorus, Time, leaping over sixteen years with
-his crutch between the third and fourth act, and at Antigonus’s
-landing with the infant Perdita on the sea-coast of Bohemia. These
-slips or blemishes however do not prove it not to be Shakespear’s;
-for he was as likely to fall into them as any body; but we do not
-know any body but himself who could produce the beauties. The
-<em>stuff</em> of which the tragic passion is composed, the romantic sweetness,
-the comic humour, are evidently his. Even the crabbed and
-tortuous style of the speeches of Leontes, reasoning on his own
-jealousy, beset with doubts and fears, and entangled more and more
-in the thorny labyrinth, bears every mark of Shakespear’s peculiar
-manner of conveying the painful struggle of different thoughts and
-feelings, labouring for utterance, and almost strangled in the birth.
-For instance:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Ha’ not you seen, Camillo?</div>
- <div class='line'>(But that’s past doubt; you have, or your eye-glass</div>
- <div class='line'>Is thicker than a cuckold’s horn) or heard,</div>
- <div class='line'>(For to a vision so apparent, rumour</div>
- <div class='line'>Cannot be mute) or thought (for cogitation</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_325'>325</span>Resides not within man that does not think)</div>
- <div class='line'>My wife is slippery? If thou wilt, confess,</div>
- <div class='line'>Or else be impudently negative,</div>
- <div class='line'>To have nor eyes, nor ears, nor thought.’—</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Here Leontes is confounded with his passion, and does not know
-which way to turn himself, to give words to the anguish, rage, and
-apprehension, which tug at his breast. It is only as he is worked up
-into a clearer conviction of his wrongs by insisting on the grounds of
-his unjust suspicions to Camillo, who irritates him by his opposition,
-that he bursts out into the following vehement strain of bitter indignation:
-yet even here his passion staggers, and is as it were oppressed
-with its own intensity.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Is whispering nothing?</div>
- <div class='line'>Is leaning cheek to cheek? is meeting noses?</div>
- <div class='line'>Kissing with inside lip? stopping the career</div>
- <div class='line'>Of laughter with a sigh? (a note infallible</div>
- <div class='line'>Of breaking honesty!) horsing foot on foot?</div>
- <div class='line'>Skulking in corners? wishing clocks more swift?</div>
- <div class='line'>Hours, minutes? the noon, midnight? and all eyes</div>
- <div class='line'>Blind with the pin and web, but theirs; theirs only,</div>
- <div class='line'>That would, unseen, be wicked? is this nothing?</div>
- <div class='line'>Why then the world, and all that’s in’t, is nothing,</div>
- <div class='line'>The covering sky is nothing, Bohemia’s nothing,</div>
- <div class='line'>My wife is nothing!’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The character of Hermione is as much distinguished by its saintlike
-resignation and patient forbearance, as that of Paulina is by her
-zealous and spirited remonstrances against the injustice done to the
-queen, and by her devoted attachment to her misfortunes. Hermione’s
-restoration to her husband and her child, after her long
-separation from them, is as affecting in itself as it is striking in the
-representation. Camillo, and the old shepherd and his son, are
-subordinate but not uninteresting instruments in the developement of
-the plot, and though last, not least, comes Autolycus, a very pleasant,
-thriving rogue; and (what is the best feather in the cap of all knavery)
-he escapes with impunity in the end.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='sc'>The Winter’s Tale</span> is one of the best-acting of our author’s plays.
-We remember seeing it with great pleasure many years ago. It was
-on the night that King took leave of the stage, when he and Mrs.
-Jordan played together in the after-piece of the Wedding-day.
-Nothing could go off with more <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">éclat</span></i>, with more spirit, and grandeur
-of effect. Mrs. Siddons played Hermione, and in the last scene
-acted the painted statue to the life—with true monumental dignity
-and noble passion; Mr. Kemble, in Leontes, worked himself up into
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_326'>326</span>a very fine classical phrensy; and Bannister, as Autolycus, roared as
-loud for pity as a sturdy beggar could do who felt none of the pain
-he counterfeited, and was sound of wind and limb. We shall never
-see these parts so acted again; or if we did, it would be in vain.
-Actors grow old, or no longer surprise us by their novelty. But true
-poetry, like nature, is always young; and we still read the courtship
-of Florizel and Perdita, as we welcome the return of spring, with the
-same feelings as ever.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Florizel.</em> Thou dearest Perdita,</div>
- <div class='line'>With these forc’d thoughts, I pr’ythee, darken not</div>
- <div class='line'>The mirth o’ the feast: or, I’ll be thine, my fair,</div>
- <div class='line'>Or not my father’s: for I cannot be</div>
- <div class='line'>Mine own, nor any thing to any, if</div>
- <div class='line'>I be not thine. To this I am most constant,</div>
- <div class='line'>Tho’ destiny say, No. Be merry, gentle;</div>
- <div class='line'>Strangle such thoughts as these, with any thing</div>
- <div class='line'>That you behold the while. Your guests are coming:</div>
- <div class='line'>Lift up your countenance; as it were the day</div>
- <div class='line'>Of celebration of that nuptial, which</div>
- <div class='line'>We two have sworn shall come.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Perdita.</em> O lady fortune,</div>
- <div class='line'>Stand you auspicious!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in2'><em>Enter Shepherd, Clown</em>, <span class='sc'>Mopsa</span>, <span class='sc'>Dorcas</span>, <em>Servants; with</em> <span class='sc'>Polixenes</span>, <em>and</em> <span class='sc'>Camillo</span>, <em>disguised</em>.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Florizel.</em> See, your guests approach.</div>
- <div class='line'>Address yourself to entertain them sprightly,</div>
- <div class='line'>And let’s be red with mirth.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Shepherd.</em> Fie, daughter! when my old wife liv’d, upon</div>
- <div class='line'>This day, she was both pantler, butler, cook;</div>
- <div class='line'>Both dame and servant: welcom’d all, serv’d all:</div>
- <div class='line'>Would sing her song, and dance her turn: now here</div>
- <div class='line'>At upper end o’ the table, now i’ the middle:</div>
- <div class='line'>On his shoulder, and his: her face o’ fire</div>
- <div class='line'>With labour; and the thing she took to quench it</div>
- <div class='line'>She would to each one sip. You are retir’d,</div>
- <div class='line'>As if you were a feasted one, and not</div>
- <div class='line'>The hostess of the meeting. Pray you, bid</div>
- <div class='line'>These unknown friends to us welcome; for it is</div>
- <div class='line'>A way to make us better friends, more known.</div>
- <div class='line'>Come, quench your blushes; and present yourself</div>
- <div class='line'>That which you are, mistress o’ the feast. Come on,</div>
- <div class='line'>And bid us welcome to your sheep-shearing,</div>
- <div class='line'>As your good flock shall prosper.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Perdita.</em> Sir, welcome! <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>[<em>To Polixenes and Camillo.</em><span class='hidev'>|</span></span></div>
- <div class='line'>It is my father’s will I should take on me</div>
- <div class='line'>The hostess-ship o’ the day: you’re welcome, sir!</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_327'>327</span>Give me those flowers there, Dorcas.—Reverend sirs,</div>
- <div class='line'>For you there’s rosemary and rue; these keep</div>
- <div class='line'>Seeming, and savour, all the winter long:</div>
- <div class='line'>Grace and remembrance be unto you both,</div>
- <div class='line'>And welcome to our shearing!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Polixenes.</em> Shepherdess,</div>
- <div class='line'>(A fair one are you) well you fit our ages</div>
- <div class='line'>With flowers of winter.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Perdita.</em> Sir, the year growing ancient,</div>
- <div class='line'>Not yet on summer’s death, nor on the birth</div>
- <div class='line'>Of trembling winter, the fairest flowers o’ the season</div>
- <div class='line'>Are our carnations, and streak’d gilly-flowers,</div>
- <div class='line'>Which some call nature’s bastards: of that kind</div>
- <div class='line'>Our rustic garden’s barren; and I care not</div>
- <div class='line'>To get slips of them.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Polixenes.</em> Wherefore, gentle maiden,</div>
- <div class='line'>Do you neglect them?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Perdita.</em> For I have heard it said</div>
- <div class='line'>There is an art, which, in their piedness, shares</div>
- <div class='line'>With great creating nature.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Polixenes.</em> Say, there be:</div>
- <div class='line'>Yet nature is made better by no mean,</div>
- <div class='line'>But nature makes that mean: so, o’er that art</div>
- <div class='line'>Which you say, adds to nature, is an art</div>
- <div class='line'>That nature makes. You see, sweet maid, we marry</div>
- <div class='line'>A gentler scyon to the wildest stock;</div>
- <div class='line'>And make conceive a bark of baser kind</div>
- <div class='line'>By bud of nobler race. This is an art</div>
- <div class='line'>Which does mend nature, change it rather: but</div>
- <div class='line'>The art itself is nature.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Perdita.</em> So it is.<a id='r71' /><a href='#f71' class='c012'><sup>[71]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Polixenes.</em> Then make your garden rich in gilly-flowers,</div>
- <div class='line'>And do not call them bastards.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Perdita.</em> I’ll not put</div>
- <div class='line'>The dibble in earth, to set one slip of them;<a href='#f71' class='c012'><sup>[71]</sup></a></div>
- <div class='line'>No more than, were I painted, I would wish</div>
- <div class='line'>This youth should say, ‘twere well; and only therefore</div>
- <div class='line'>Desire to breed by me.—Here’s flowers for you;</div>
- <div class='line'>Hot lavender, mints, savoury, marjoram;</div>
- <div class='line'>The marigold, that goes to bed with the sun,</div>
- <div class='line'>And with him rises, weeping: these are flowers</div>
- <div class='line'>Of middle summer, and, I think, they are given</div>
- <div class='line'>To men of middle age. You are very welcome.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Camillo.</em> I should leave grazing, were I of your flock,</div>
- <div class='line'>And only live by gazing.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Perdita.</em> Out, alas!</div>
- <div class='line'>You’d be so lean, that blasts of January</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_328'>328</span>Would blow you through and through. Now my fairest friends,</div>
- <div class='line'>I would I had some flowers o’ the spring, that might</div>
- <div class='line'>Become your time of day; and your’s, and your’s,</div>
- <div class='line'>That wear upon your virgin branches yet</div>
- <div class='line'>Your maiden-heads growing: O Proserpina,</div>
- <div class='line'>For the flowers now, that, frighted, thou let’st fall</div>
- <div class='line'>From Dis’s waggon! daffodils,</div>
- <div class='line'>That come before the swallow dares, and take</div>
- <div class='line'>The winds of March with beauty: violets dim,</div>
- <div class='line'>But sweeter than the lids of Juno’s eyes,</div>
- <div class='line'>Or Cytherea’s breath; pale primroses,</div>
- <div class='line'>That die unmarried, ere they can behold</div>
- <div class='line'>Bright Phœbus in his strength (a malady</div>
- <div class='line'>Most incident to maids); bold oxlips, and</div>
- <div class='line'>The crown-imperial; lilies of all kinds,</div>
- <div class='line'>The fleur-de-lis being one! O, these I lack</div>
- <div class='line'>To make you garlands of; and my sweet friend</div>
- <div class='line'>To strow him o’er and o’er.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Florizel.</em> What, like a corse?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Perdita.</em> No, like a bank, for love to lie and play on;</div>
- <div class='line'>Not like a corse; or if—not to be buried,</div>
- <div class='line'>But quick, and in mine arms. Come take your flowers;</div>
- <div class='line'>Methinks, I play as I have seen them do</div>
- <div class='line'>In Whitsun pastorals: sure this robe of mine</div>
- <div class='line'>Does change my disposition.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Florizel.</em> What you do,</div>
- <div class='line'>Still betters what is done. When you speak, sweet,</div>
- <div class='line'>I’d have you do it ever: when you sing,</div>
- <div class='line'>I’d have you buy and sell so; so, give alms;</div>
- <div class='line'>Pray, so; and for the ordering your affairs,</div>
- <div class='line'>To sing them too. When you do dance, I wish you</div>
- <div class='line'>A wave o’ the sea, that you might ever do</div>
- <div class='line'>Nothing but that: move still, still so,</div>
- <div class='line'>And own no other function. Each your doing,</div>
- <div class='line'>So singular in each particular,</div>
- <div class='line'>Crowns what you’re doing in the present deeds,</div>
- <div class='line'>That all your acts are queens.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Perdita.</em> O Doricles,</div>
- <div class='line'>Your praises are too large; but that your youth</div>
- <div class='line'>And the true blood, which peeps forth fairly through it,</div>
- <div class='line'>Do plainly give you out an unstained shepherd;</div>
- <div class='line'>With wisdom I might fear, my Doricles,</div>
- <div class='line'>You woo’d me the false way.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Florizel.</em> I think you have</div>
- <div class='line'>As little skill to fear, as I have purpose</div>
- <div class='line'>To put you to’t. But come, our dance, I pray:</div>
- <div class='line'>Your hand, my Perdita: so turtles pair,</div>
- <div class='line'>That never mean to part.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Perdita.</em> I’ll swear for ‘em.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_329'>329</span><em>Polixenes.</em> This is the prettiest low-born lass that ever</div>
- <div class='line'>Ran on the green-sward; nothing she does, or seems,</div>
- <div class='line'>But smacks of something greater than herself,</div>
- <div class='line'>Too noble for this place.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Camillo.</em> He tells her something</div>
- <div class='line'>That makes her blood look out: good sooth she is</div>
- <div class='line'>The queen of curds and cream.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>This delicious scene is interrupted by the father of the prince discovering
-himself to Florizel, and haughtily breaking off the intended
-match between his son and Perdita. When Polixenes goes out,
-Perdita says,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Even here undone:</div>
- <div class='line'>I was not much afraid; for once or twice</div>
- <div class='line'>I was about to speak; and tell him plainly,</div>
- <div class='line'>The self-same sun that shines upon his court,</div>
- <div class='line'>Hides not his visage from our cottage, but</div>
- <div class='line'>Looks on’t alike. Wilt please you, sir, be gone? <span class='sni'><span class='hidev'>|</span>[<em>To Florizel.</em><span class='hidev'>|</span></span></div>
- <div class='line'>I told you what would come of this. Beseech you,</div>
- <div class='line'>Of your own state take care: this dream of mine,</div>
- <div class='line'>Being now awake, I’ll queen it no inch farther,</div>
- <div class='line'>But milk my ewes and weep.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>As Perdita, the supposed shepherdess, turns out to be the daughter of
-Hermione, and a princess in disguise, both feelings of the pride of
-birth and the claims of nature are satisfied by the fortunate event
-of the story, and the fine romance of poetry is reconciled to the
-strictest court-etiquette.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>ALL’S WELL THAT ENDS WELL</h3>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='sc'>All’s Well that Ends Well</span> is one of the most pleasing of our
-author’s comedies. The interest is however more of a serious than of a
-comic nature. The character of Helen is one of great sweetness and
-delicacy. She is placed in circumstances of the most critical kind,
-and has to court her husband both as a virgin and a wife: yet the
-most scrupulous nicety of female modesty is not once violated. There
-is not one thought or action that ought to bring a blush into her
-cheeks, or that for a moment lessens her in our esteem. Perhaps the
-romantic attachment of a beautiful and virtuous girl to one placed
-above her hopes by the circumstances of birth and fortune, was never
-so exquisitely expressed as in the reflections which she utters when
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_330'>330</span>young Roussillon leaves his mother’s house, under whose protection she
-has been brought up with him, to repair to the French king’s court.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Helena.</em> Oh, were that all—I think not on my father,</div>
- <div class='line'>And these great tears grace his remembrance more</div>
- <div class='line'>Than those I shed for him. What was he like?</div>
- <div class='line'>I have forgot him. My imagination</div>
- <div class='line'>Carries no favour in it, but Bertram’s.</div>
- <div class='line'>I am undone, there is no living, none</div>
- <div class='line'>If Bertram be away. It were all one</div>
- <div class='line'>That I should love a bright particular star,</div>
- <div class='line'>And think to wed it; he is so above me:</div>
- <div class='line'>In his bright radiance and collateral light</div>
- <div class='line'>Must I be comforted, not in his sphere.</div>
- <div class='line'>Th’ ambition in my love thus plagues itself;</div>
- <div class='line'>The hind that would be mated by the lion,</div>
- <div class='line'>Must die for love. ’Twas pretty, tho’ a plague,</div>
- <div class='line'>To see him every hour, to sit and draw</div>
- <div class='line'>His arched brows, his hawking eye, his curls</div>
- <div class='line'>In our heart’s table: heart too capable</div>
- <div class='line'>Of every line and trick of his sweet favour.</div>
- <div class='line'>But now he’s gone, and my idolatrous fancy</div>
- <div class='line'>Must sanctify his relics.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The interest excited by this beautiful picture of a fond and innocent
-heart is kept up afterwards by her resolution to follow him to France,
-the success of her experiment in restoring the king’s health, her demanding
-Bertram in marriage as a recompense, his leaving her in
-disdain, her interview with him afterwards disguised as Diana, a
-young lady whom he importunes with his secret addresses, and their
-final reconciliation when the consequences of her stratagem and the
-proofs of her love are fully made known. The persevering gratitude
-of the French king to his benefactress, who cures him of a languishing
-distemper by a prescription hereditary in her family, the indulgent
-kindness of the Countess, whose pride of birth yields, almost without
-a struggle, to her affection for Helen, the honesty and uprightness of
-the good old lord Lafeu, make very interesting parts of the picture.
-The wilful stubbornness and youthful petulance of Bertram are also
-very admirably described. The comic part of the play turns on the
-folly, boasting, and cowardice of Parolles, a parasite and hanger-on
-of Bertram’s, the detection of whose false pretensions to bravery and
-honour forms a very amusing episode. He is first found out by the
-old lord Lafeu, who says, ‘The soul of this man is in his clothes’;
-and it is proved afterwards that his heart is in his tongue, and that
-both are false and hollow. The adventure of ‘the bringing off of his
-drum’ has become proverbial as a satire on all ridiculous and blustering
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_331'>331</span>undertakings which the person never means to perform: nor can
-any thing be more severe than what one of the bye-standers remarks
-upon what Parolles says of himself, ‘Is it possible he should know
-what he is, and be that he is?’ Yet Parolles himself gives the best
-solution of the difficulty afterwards when he is thankful to escape
-with his life and the loss of character; for, so that he can live on,
-he is by no means squeamish about the loss of pretensions, to which
-he had sense enough to know he had no real claim, and which he
-had assumed only as a means to live.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Parolles.</em> Yet I am thankful: if my heart were great,</div>
- <div class='line'>‘Twould burst at this. Captain I’ll be no more,</div>
- <div class='line'>But I will eat and drink, and sleep as soft</div>
- <div class='line'>As captain shall. Simply the thing I am</div>
- <div class='line'>Shall make me live: who knows himself a braggart,</div>
- <div class='line'>Let him fear this; for it shall come to pass,</div>
- <div class='line'>That every braggart shall be found an ass.</div>
- <div class='line'>Rust sword, cool blushes, and Parolles live</div>
- <div class='line'>Safest in shame; being fool’d, by fool’ry thrive;</div>
- <div class='line'>There’s place and means for every man alive.</div>
- <div class='line'>I’ll after them.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The story of <span class='sc'>All’s Well that Ends Well</span>, and of several others of
-Shakespear’s plays, is taken from Boccacio. The poet has dramatised
-the original novel with great skill and comic spirit, and has preserved
-all the beauty of character and sentiment without <em>improving upon</em> it,
-which was impossible. There is indeed in Boccacio’s serious pieces
-a truth, a pathos, and an exquisite refinement of sentiment, which is
-hardly to be met with in any other prose writer whatever. Justice
-has not been done him by the world. He has in general passed for
-a mere narrator of lascivious tales or idle jests. This character
-probably originated in his obnoxious attacks on the monks, and has
-been kept up by the grossness of mankind, who revenged their own
-want of refinement on Boccacio, and only saw in his writings what
-suited the coarseness of their own tastes. But the truth is, that he
-has carried sentiment of every kind to its very highest purity and
-perfection. By sentiment we would here understand the habitual
-workings of some one powerful feeling, where the heart reposes
-almost entirely upon itself, without the violent excitement of opposing
-duties or untoward circumstances. In this way, nothing ever came
-up to the story of Frederigo Alberigi and his Falcon. The perseverance
-in attachment, the spirit of gallantry and generosity displayed
-in it, has no parallel in the history of heroical sacrifices. The
-feeling is so unconscious too, and involuntary, is brought out in such
-small, unlooked-for, and unostentatious circumstances, as to show it to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_332'>332</span>have been woven into the very nature and soul of the author. The
-story of Isabella is scarcely less fine, and is more affecting in the
-circumstances and in the catastrophe. Dryden has done justice to
-the impassioned eloquence of the Tancred and Sigismunda; but has
-not given an adequate idea of the wild preternatural interest of the
-story of Honoria. Cimon and Iphigene is by no means one of the
-best, notwithstanding the popularity of the subject. The proof of
-unalterable affection given in the story of Jeronymo, and the simple
-touches of nature and picturesque beauty in the story of the two
-holiday lovers, who were poisoned by tasting of a leaf in the garden
-at Florence, are perfect master-pieces. The epithet of Divine was
-well bestowed on this great painter of the human heart. The invention
-implied in his different tales is immense: but we are not to
-infer that it is all his own. He probably availed himself of all the
-common traditions which were floating in his time, and which he was
-the first to appropriate. Homer appears the most original of all
-authors—probably for no other reason than that we can trace the
-plagiarism no farther. Boccacio has furnished subjects to numberless
-writers since his time, both dramatic and narrative. The story of
-Griselda is borrowed from his Decameron by Chaucer; as is the
-Knight’s Tale (Palamon and Arcite) from his poem of the Theseid.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>LOVE’S LABOUR’S LOST</h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>If we were to part with any of the author’s comedies, it should be
-this. Yet we should be loth to part with Don Adriano de Armado,
-that mighty potentate of nonsense, or his page, that handful of wit;
-with Nathaniel the curate, or Holofernes the schoolmaster, and their
-dispute after dinner on ‘the golden cadences of poesy’; with Costard
-the clown, or Dull the constable. Biron is too accomplished a
-character to be lost to the world, and yet he could not appear without
-his fellow courtiers and the king: and if we were to leave out
-the ladies, the gentlemen would have no mistresses. So that we
-believe we may let the whole play stand as it is, and we shall hardly
-venture to ‘set a mark of reprobation on it.’ Still we have some
-objections to the style, which we think savours more of the pedantic
-spirit of Shakespear’s time than of his own genius; more of controversial
-divinity, and the logic of Peter Lombard, than of the
-inspiration of the Muse. It transports us quite as much to the
-manners of the court, and the quirks of courts of law, as to the scenes
-of nature or the fairy-land of his own imagination. Shakespear has
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_333'>333</span>set himself to imitate the tone of polite conversation then prevailing
-among the fair, the witty, and the learned, and he has imitated it but
-too faithfully. It is as if the hand of Titian had been employed to
-give grace to the curls of a full-bottomed periwig, or Raphael had
-attempted to give expression to the tapestry figures in the House of
-Lords. Shakespear has put an excellent description of this fashionable
-jargon into the mouth of the critical Holofernes ‘as too picked,
-too spruce, too affected, too odd, as it were, too peregrinate, as I may
-call it’; and nothing can be more marked than the difference when
-he breaks loose from the trammels he had imposed on himself, ‘as
-light as bird from brake,’ and speaks in his own person. We think,
-for instance, that in the following soliloquy the poet has fairly got the
-start of Queen Elizabeth and her maids of honour:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Biron.</em> O! and I forsooth in love,</div>
- <div class='line'>I that have been love’s whip;</div>
- <div class='line'>A very beadle to an amorous sigh:</div>
- <div class='line'>A critic; nay, a night-watch constable,</div>
- <div class='line'>A domineering pedant o’er the boy,</div>
- <div class='line'>Than whom no mortal more magnificent.</div>
- <div class='line'>This wimpled, whining, purblind, wayward boy,</div>
- <div class='line'>This signior Junio, giant dwarf, Dan Cupid,</div>
- <div class='line'>Regent of love-rhymes, lord of folded arms,</div>
- <div class='line'>Th’ anointed sovereign of sighs and groans:</div>
- <div class='line'>Liege of all loiterers and malecontents,</div>
- <div class='line'>Dread prince of plackets, king of codpieces,</div>
- <div class='line'>Sole imperator, and great general</div>
- <div class='line'>Of trotting parators (O my little heart!)</div>
- <div class='line'>And I to be a corporal of his field,</div>
- <div class='line'>And wear his colours like a tumbler’s hoop?</div>
- <div class='line'>What? I love! I sue! I seek a wife!</div>
- <div class='line'>A woman, that is like a German clock,</div>
- <div class='line'>Still a repairing; ever out of frame;</div>
- <div class='line'>And never going aright, being a watch,</div>
- <div class='line'>And being watch’d, that it may still go right?</div>
- <div class='line'>Nay, to be perjur’d, which is worst of all:</div>
- <div class='line'>And among three to love the worst of all,</div>
- <div class='line'>A whitely wanton with a velvet brow,</div>
- <div class='line'>With two pitch balls stuck in her face for eyes;</div>
- <div class='line'>Ay, and by heav’n, one that will do the deed,</div>
- <div class='line'>Though Argus were her eunuch and her guard;</div>
- <div class='line'>And I to sigh for her! to watch for her!</div>
- <div class='line'>To pray for her! Go to; it is a plague</div>
- <div class='line'>That Cupid will impose for my neglect</div>
- <div class='line'>Of his almighty dreadful little might.</div>
- <div class='line'>Well, I will love, write, sigh, pray, sue, and groan:</div>
- <div class='line'>Some men must love my lady, and some Joan.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_334'>334</span>The character of Biron drawn by Rosaline and that which Biron
-gives of Boyet are equally happy. The observations on the use and
-abuse of study, and on the power of beauty to quicken the understanding
-as well as the senses, are excellent. The scene which has
-the greatest dramatic effect is that in which Biron, the king,
-Longaville, and Dumain, successively detect each other and are
-detected in their breach of their vow and in their profession of
-attachment to their several mistresses, in which they suppose themselves
-to be overheard by no one. The reconciliation between these
-lovers and their sweethearts is also very good, and the penance which
-Rosaline imposes on Biron, before he can expect to gain her consent
-to marry him, full of propriety and beauty.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Rosaline.</em> Oft have I heard of you, my lord Biron,</div>
- <div class='line'>Before I saw you: and the world’s large tongue</div>
- <div class='line'>Proclaims you for a man replete with mocks;</div>
- <div class='line'>Full of comparisons, and wounding flouts;</div>
- <div class='line'>Which you on all estates will execute,</div>
- <div class='line'>That lie within the mercy of your wit.</div>
- <div class='line'>To weed this wormwood from your faithful brain;</div>
- <div class='line'>And therewithal to win me, if you please,</div>
- <div class='line'>(Without the which I am not to be won)</div>
- <div class='line'>You shall this twelvemonth term from day to day</div>
- <div class='line'>Visit the speechless sick, and still converse</div>
- <div class='line'>With groaning wretches; and your task shall be,</div>
- <div class='line'>With all the fierce endeavour of your wit,</div>
- <div class='line'>T’ enforce the pained impotent to smile.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Biron.</em> To move wild laughter in the throat of death?</div>
- <div class='line'>It cannot be: it is impossible:</div>
- <div class='line'>Mirth cannot move a soul in agony.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Rosaline.</em> Why, that’s the way to choke a gibing spirit,</div>
- <div class='line'>Whose influence is begot of that loose grace,</div>
- <div class='line'>Which shallow laughing hearers give to fools:</div>
- <div class='line'>A jest’s prosperity lies in the ear</div>
- <div class='line'>Of him that hears it; never in the tongue</div>
- <div class='line'>Of him that makes it: then, if sickly ears,</div>
- <div class='line'>Deaf’d with the clamours of their own dear groans,</div>
- <div class='line'>Will hear your idle scorns, continue then,</div>
- <div class='line'>And I will have you, and that fault withal;</div>
- <div class='line'>But, if they will not, throw away that spirit,</div>
- <div class='line'>And I shall find you empty of that fault,</div>
- <div class='line'>Right joyful of your reformation.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Biron.</em> A twelvemonth? Well, befall what will befall,</div>
- <div class='line'>I’ll jest a twelvemonth in an hospital.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The famous cuckoo-song closes the play: but we shall add no more
-criticisms: ‘the words of Mercury are harsh after the songs of Apollo.’</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_335'>335</span>
- <h3 class='c010'>MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>This admirable comedy used to be frequently acted till of late years.
-Mr. Garrick’s Benedick was one of his most celebrated characters;
-and Mrs. Jordan, we have understood, played Beatrice very delightfully.
-The serious part is still the most prominent here, as in other
-instances that we have noticed. Hero is the principal figure in the
-piece, and leaves an indelible impression on the mind by her beauty,
-her tenderness, and the hard trial of her love. The passage in which
-Claudio first makes a confession of his affection towards her, conveys
-as pleasing an image of the entrance of love into a youthful bosom as
-can well be imagined.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Oh, my lord,</div>
- <div class='line'>When you went onward with this ended action,</div>
- <div class='line'>I look’d upon her with a soldier’s eye,</div>
- <div class='line'>That lik’d, but had a rougher task in hand</div>
- <div class='line'>Than to drive liking to the name of love;</div>
- <div class='line'>But now I am return’d, and that war-thoughts</div>
- <div class='line'>Have left their places vacant; in their rooms</div>
- <div class='line'>Come thronging soft and delicate desires,</div>
- <div class='line'>All prompting me how fair young Hero is,</div>
- <div class='line'>Saying, I lik’d her ere I went to wars.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the scene at the altar, when Claudio, urged on by the villain
-Don John, brings the charge of incontinence against her, and as it were
-divorces her in the very marriage-ceremony, her appeals to her own
-conscious innocence and honour are made with the most affecting
-simplicity.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Claudio.</em> No, Leonato,</div>
- <div class='line'>I never tempted her with word too large,</div>
- <div class='line'>But, as a brother to his sister, shew’d</div>
- <div class='line'>Bashful sincerity, and comely love.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Hero.</em> And seem’d I ever otherwise to you?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Claudio.</em> Out on thy seeming, I will write against it:</div>
- <div class='line'>You seem to me as Dian in her orb,</div>
- <div class='line'>As chaste as is the bud ere it be blown;</div>
- <div class='line'>But you are more intemperate in your blood</div>
- <div class='line'>Than Venus, or those pamper’d animals</div>
- <div class='line'>That rage in savage sensuality.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Hero.</em> Is my lord well, that he doth speak so wide?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Leonato.</em> Are these things spoken, or do I but dream?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>John.</em> Sir, they are spoken, and these things are true.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Benedick.</em> This looks not like a nuptial.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Hero.</em> True! O God!’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_336'>336</span>The justification of Hero in the end, and her restoration to the
-confidence and arms of her lover, is brought about by one of those
-temporary consignments to the grave of which Shakespear seems to
-have been fond. He has perhaps explained the theory of this
-predilection in the following lines:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Friar.</em> She dying, as it must be so maintain’d,</div>
- <div class='line'>Upon the instant that she was accus’d,</div>
- <div class='line'>Shall be lamented, pity’d, and excus’d,</div>
- <div class='line'>Of every hearer: for it so falls out,</div>
- <div class='line'>That what we have we prize not to the worth,</div>
- <div class='line'>While we enjoy it; but being lack’d and lost,</div>
- <div class='line'>Why then we rack the value; then we find</div>
- <div class='line'>The virtue, that possession would not shew us</div>
- <div class='line'>Whilst it was ours.—So will it fare with Claudio;</div>
- <div class='line'>When he shall hear she dy’d upon his words,</div>
- <div class='line'>The idea of her love shall sweetly creep</div>
- <div class='line'>Into his study of imagination;</div>
- <div class='line'>And every lovely organ of her life</div>
- <div class='line'>Shall come apparel’d in more precious habit,</div>
- <div class='line'>More moving, delicate, and full of life,</div>
- <div class='line'>Into the eye and prospect of his soul,</div>
- <div class='line'>Than when she liv’d indeed.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The principal comic characters in <span class='sc'>Much Ado about Nothing</span>,
-Benedick and Beatrice, are both essences in their kind. His
-character as a woman-hater is admirably supported, and his conversion
-to matrimony is no less happily effected by the pretended story of
-Beatrice’s love for him. It is hard to say which of the two scenes
-is the best, that of the trick which is thus practised on Benedick, or
-that in which Beatrice is prevailed on to take pity on him by overhearing
-her cousin and her maid declare (which they do on purpose)
-that he is dying of love for her. There is something delightfully
-picturesque in the manner in which Beatrice is described as coming to
-hear the plot which is contrived against herself—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘For look where Beatrice, like a lapwing, runs</div>
- <div class='line'>Close by the ground, to hear our conference.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>In consequence of what she hears (not a word of which is true) she
-exclaims when these good-natured informants are gone,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘What fire is in mine ears? Can this be true?</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Stand I condemn’d for pride and scorn so much?</div>
- <div class='line'>Contempt, farewell! and maiden pride adieu!</div>
- <div class='line in4'>No glory lives behind the back of such.</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_337'>337</span>And, Benedick, love on, I will requite thee;</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Taming my wild heart to thy loving hand;</div>
- <div class='line'>If thou dost love, my kindness shall incite thee</div>
- <div class='line in4'>To bind our loves up in an holy band:</div>
- <div class='line'>For others say thou dost deserve; and I</div>
- <div class='line'>Believe it better than reportingly.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>And Benedick, on his part, is equally sincere in his repentance with
-equal reason, after he has heard the grey-beard, Leonato, and his
-friend, ‘Monsieur Love,’ discourse of the desperate state of his
-supposed inamorata.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'>‘This can be no trick; the conference was sadly borne.—They have the
-truth of this from Hero. They seem to pity the lady; it seems her
-affections have the full bent. Love me! why, it must be requited. I
-hear how I am censur’d: they say, I will bear myself proudly, if I perceive
-the love come from her; they say too, that she will rather die than give
-any sign of affection.—I did never think to marry: I must not seem
-proud:—happy are they that hear their detractions, and can put them to
-mending. They say, the lady is fair; ’tis a truth, I can bear them witness:
-and virtuous;—’tis so, I cannot reprove it: and wise—but for loving me:—by
-my troth it is no addition to her wit;—nor no great argument of
-her folly, for I will be horribly in love with her.—I may chance to have
-some odd quirks and remnants of wit broken on me, because I have rail’d
-so long against marriage: but doth not the appetite alter? A man loves
-the meat in his youth, that he cannot endure in his age.—Shall quips, and
-sentences, and these paper bullets of the brain, awe a man from the career
-of his humour? No: the world must be peopled. When I said, I would
-die a bachelor, I did not think I should live till I were marry’d.—Here
-comes Beatrice: by this day, she’s a fair lady: I do spy some marks of
-love in her.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The beauty of all this arises from the characters of the persons so
-entrapped. Benedick is a professed and staunch enemy to marriage,
-and gives very plausible reasons for the faith that is in him. And as
-to Beatrice, she persecutes him all day with her jests (so that he
-could hardly think of being troubled with them at night) she not only
-turns him but all other things into jest, and is proof against everything
-serious.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Hero.</em> Disdain and scorn ride sparkling in her eyes,</div>
- <div class='line'>Misprising what they look on; and her wit</div>
- <div class='line'>Values itself so highly, that to her</div>
- <div class='line'>All matter else seems weak: she cannot love,</div>
- <div class='line'>Nor take no shape nor project of affection,</div>
- <div class='line'>She is so self-endeared.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Ursula.</em> Sure, I think so;</div>
- <div class='line'>And therefore, certainly, it were not good</div>
- <div class='line'>She knew his love, lest she make sport at it.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_338'>338</span><em>Hero.</em> Why, you speak truth: I never yet saw man,</div>
- <div class='line'>How wise, how noble, young, how rarely featur’d,</div>
- <div class='line'>But she would spell him backward: if fair-fac’d,</div>
- <div class='line'>She’d swear the gentleman should be her sister;</div>
- <div class='line'>If black, why, nature, drawing of an antick,</div>
- <div class='line'>Made a foul blot: if tall, a lance ill-headed;</div>
- <div class='line'>If low, an agate very vilely cut:</div>
- <div class='line'>If speaking, why, a vane blown with all winds;</div>
- <div class='line'>If silent, why, a block moved with none.</div>
- <div class='line'>So turns she every man the wrong side out;</div>
- <div class='line'>And never gives to truth and virtue that</div>
- <div class='line'>Which simpleness and merit purchaseth.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>These were happy materials for Shakespear to work on, and he
-has made a happy use of them. Perhaps that middle point of comedy
-was never more nicely hit in which the ludicrous blends with the
-tender, and our follies, turning round against themselves in support of
-our affections, retain nothing but their humanity.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Dogberry and Verges in this play are inimitable specimens of quaint
-blundering and misprisions of meaning; and are a standing record of
-that formal gravity of pretension and total want of common understanding,
-which Shakespear no doubt copied from real life, and which
-in the course of two hundred years appear to have ascended from the
-lowest to the highest offices in the state.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>AS YOU LIKE IT</h3>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='sc'>Shakespear</span> has here converted the forest of Arden into another
-Arcadia, where they ‘fleet the time carelessly, as they did in the
-golden world.’ It is the most ideal of any of this author’s plays.
-It is a pastoral drama, in which the interest arises more out of the
-sentiments and characters than out of the actions or situations. It is
-not what is done, but what is said, that claims our attention. Nursed
-in solitude, ‘under the shade of melancholy boughs,’ the imagination
-grows soft and delicate, and the wit runs riot in idleness, like a
-spoiled child, that is never sent to school. Caprice and fancy reign
-and revel here, and stern necessity is banished to the court. The
-mild sentiments of humanity are strengthened with thought and
-leisure; the echo of the cares and noise of the world strikes upon
-the ear of those ‘who have felt them knowingly,’ softened by time
-and distance. ‘They hear the tumult, and are still.’ The very air
-of the place seems to breathe a spirit of philosophical poetry: to stir
-the thoughts, to touch the heart with pity, as the drowsy forest rustles
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_339'>339</span>to the sighing gale. Never was there such beautiful moralising,
-equally free from pedantry or petulance.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘And this their life, exempt from public haunts,</div>
- <div class='line'>Finds tongues in trees, books in the running brooks,</div>
- <div class='line'>Sermons in stones, and good in every thing.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Jaques is the only purely contemplative character in Shakespear.
-He thinks, and does nothing. His whole occupation is to amuse his
-mind, and he is totally regardless of his body and his fortunes. He
-is the prince of philosophical idlers; his only passion is thought;
-he sets no value upon any thing but as it serves as food for reflection.
-He can ‘suck melancholy out of a song, as a weasel sucks eggs’;
-the motley fool, ‘who morals on the time,’ is the greatest prize he
-meets with in the forest. He resents Orlando’s passion for Rosalind
-as some disparagement of his own passion for abstract truth; and
-leaves the Duke, as soon as he is restored to his sovereignty, to seek
-his brother out who has quitted it, and turned hermit.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in10'>—‘Out of these convertites</div>
- <div class='line'>There is much matter to be heard and learnt.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Within the sequestered and romantic glades of the forest of Arden,
-they find leisure to be good and wise, or to play the fool and fall in
-love. Rosalind’s character is made up of sportive gaiety and natural
-tenderness: her tongue runs the faster to conceal the pressure at her
-heart. She talks herself out of breath, only to get deeper in love.
-The coquetry with which she plays with her lover in the double
-character which she has to support is managed with the nicest
-address. How full of voluble, laughing grace is all her conversation
-with Orlando—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in6'>—‘In heedless mazes running</div>
- <div class='line'>With wanton haste and giddy cunning.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>How full of real fondness and pretended cruelty is her answer to
-him when he promises to love her ‘For ever and a day!’</p>
-
-<p class='c016'>‘Say a day without the ever: no, no, Orlando, men are April when they
-woo, December when they wed: maids are May when they are maids,
-but the sky changes when they are wives: I will be more jealous of thee
-than a Barbary cock-pigeon over his hen; more clamorous than a parrot
-against rain; more new-fangled than an ape; more giddy in my desires
-than a monkey; I will weep for nothing like Diana in the fountain, and
-I will do that when you are disposed to be merry; I will laugh like a
-hyen, and that when you are inclined to sleep.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Orlando.</em> But will my Rosalind do so?</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Rosalind.</em> By my life she will do as I do.’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_340'>340</span>The silent and retired character of Celia is a necessary relief to
-the provoking loquacity of Rosalind, nor can anything be better
-conceived or more beautifully described than the mutual affection
-between the two cousins:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in10'>—‘We still have slept together,</div>
- <div class='line'>Rose at an instant, learn’d, play’d, eat together,</div>
- <div class='line'>And wheresoe’r we went, like Juno’s swans,</div>
- <div class='line'>Still we went coupled and inseparable.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The unrequited love of Silvius for Phebe shews the perversity of
-this passion in the commonest scenes of life, and the rubs and stops
-which nature throws in its way, where fortune has placed none.
-Touchstone is not in love, but he will have a mistress as a subject
-for the exercise of his grotesque humour, and to shew his contempt
-for the passion, by his indifference about the person. He is a rare
-fellow. He is a mixture of the ancient cynic philosopher with the
-modern buffoon, and turns folly into wit, and wit into folly, just as
-the fit takes him. His courtship of Audrey not only throws a
-degree of ridicule on the state of wedlock itself, but he is equally an
-enemy to the prejudices of opinion in other respects. The lofty
-tone of enthusiasm, which the Duke and his companions in exile spread
-over the stillness and solitude of a country life, receives a pleasant shock
-from Touchstone’s sceptical determination of the question.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'>‘<em>Corin.</em> And how like you this shepherd’s life, Mr. Touchstone?</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><em>Clown.</em> Truly, shepherd, in respect of itself, it is a good life; but in
-respect that it is a shepherd’s life, it is naught. In respect that it is
-solitary, I like it very well; but in respect that it is private, it is a very
-vile life. Now in respect it is in the fields, it pleaseth me well; but in
-respect it is not in the court, it is tedious. As it is a spare life, look you,
-it fits my humour; but as there is no more plenty in it, it goes much
-against my stomach.’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Zimmerman’s celebrated work on Solitude discovers only <em>half</em> the
-sense of this passage.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There is hardly any of Shakespear’s plays that contains a greater
-number of passages that have been quoted in books of extracts, or a
-greater number of phrases that have become in a manner proverbial.
-If we were to give all the striking passages, we should give half the
-play. We will only recall a few of the most delightful to the reader’s
-recollection. Such are the meeting between Orlando and Adam,
-the exquisite appeal of Orlando to the humanity of the Duke and his
-company to supply him with food for the old man, and their answer,
-the Duke’s description of a country life, and the account of Jaques
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_341'>341</span>moralising on the wounded deer, his meeting with Touchstone in the
-forest, his apology for his own melancholy and his satirical vein, and
-the well-known speech on the stages of human life, the old song of
-‘Blow, blow, thou winter’s wind,’ Rosalind’s description of the
-marks of a lover and of the progress of time with different persons,
-the picture of the snake wreathed round Oliver’s neck while the
-lioness watches her sleeping prey, and Touchstone’s lecture to the
-shepherd, his defence of cuckolds, and panegyric on the virtues of
-‘an If.’—All of these are familiar to the reader: there is one
-passage of equal delicacy and beauty which may have escaped him,
-and with it we shall close our account of <span class='sc'>As You Like It</span>. It is
-Phebe’s description of Ganimed at the end of the third act.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Think not I love him, tho’ I ask for him;</div>
- <div class='line'>’Tis but a peevish boy, yet he talks well;—</div>
- <div class='line'>But what care I for words! yet words do well,</div>
- <div class='line'>When he that speaks them pleases those that hear:</div>
- <div class='line'>It is a pretty youth; not very pretty;</div>
- <div class='line'>But sure he’s proud, and yet his pride becomes him;</div>
- <div class='line'>He’ll make a proper man; the best thing in him</div>
- <div class='line'>Is his complexion; and faster than his tongue</div>
- <div class='line'>Did make offence, his eye did heal it up:</div>
- <div class='line'>He is not very tall, yet for his years he’s tall;</div>
- <div class='line'>His leg is but so so, and yet ’tis well;</div>
- <div class='line'>There was a pretty redness in his lip,</div>
- <div class='line'>A little riper, and more lusty red</div>
- <div class='line'>Than that mix’d in his cheek; ’twas just the difference</div>
- <div class='line'>Betwixt the constant red and mingled damask.</div>
- <div class='line'>There be some women, Silvius, had they mark’d him</div>
- <div class='line'>In parcels as I did, would have gone near</div>
- <div class='line'>To fall in love with him: but for my part</div>
- <div class='line'>I love him not, nor hate him not; and yet</div>
- <div class='line'>I have more cause to hate him than to love him;</div>
- <div class='line'>For what had he to do to chide at me?’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>THE TAMING OF THE SHREW</h3>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='sc'>The Taming of the Shrew</span> is almost the only one of Shakespear’s
-comedies that has a regular plot, and downright moral. It is full of
-bustle, animation, and rapidity of action. It shews admirably how
-self-will is only to be got the better of by stronger will, and how one
-degree of ridiculous perversity is only to be driven out by another
-still greater. Petruchio is a madman in his senses; a very honest
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_342'>342</span>fellow, who hardly speaks a word of truth, and succeeds in all his
-tricks and impostures. He acts his assumed character to the life,
-with the most fantastical extravagance, with complete presence of
-mind, with untired animal spirits, and without a particle of ill humour
-from beginning to end.—The situation of poor Katherine, worn out
-by his incessant persecutions, becomes at last almost as pitiable as it
-is ludicrous, and it is difficult to say which to admire most, the unaccountableness
-of his actions, or the unalterableness of his resolutions.
-It is a character which most husbands ought to study, unless perhaps
-the very audacity of Petruchio’s attempt might alarm them more than
-his success would encourage them. What a sound must the following
-speech carry to some married ears!</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Think you a little din can daunt my ears?</div>
- <div class='line'>Have I not in my time heard lions roar?</div>
- <div class='line'>Have I not heard the sea, puff’d up with winds,</div>
- <div class='line'>Rage like an angry boar, chafed with sweat?</div>
- <div class='line'>Have I not heard great ordnance in the field?</div>
- <div class='line'>And heav’n’s artillery thunder in the skies?</div>
- <div class='line'>Have I not in a pitched battle heard</div>
- <div class='line'>Loud larums, neighing steeds, and trumpets clang?</div>
- <div class='line'>And do you tell me of a woman’s tongue,</div>
- <div class='line'>That gives not half so great a blow to hear,</div>
- <div class='line'>As will a chesnut in a farmer’s fire?’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Not all Petruchio’s rhetoric would persuade more than ‘some
-dozen followers’ to be of this heretical way of thinking. He unfolds
-his scheme for the <cite>Taming of the Shrew</cite>, on a principle of contradiction,
-thus:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘I’ll woo her with some spirit when she comes.</div>
- <div class='line'>Say that she rail, why then I’ll tell her plain</div>
- <div class='line'>She sings as sweetly as a nightingale;</div>
- <div class='line'>Say that she frown, I’ll say she looks as clear</div>
- <div class='line'>As morning roses newly wash’d with dew;</div>
- <div class='line'>Say she be mute, and will not speak a word,</div>
- <div class='line'>Then I’ll commend her volubility,</div>
- <div class='line'>And say she uttereth piercing eloquence:</div>
- <div class='line'>If she do bid me pack, I’ll give her thanks,</div>
- <div class='line'>As though she bid me stay by her a week;</div>
- <div class='line'>If she deny to wed, I’ll crave the day,</div>
- <div class='line'>When I shall ask the banns, and when be married?’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>He accordingly gains her consent to the match, by telling her father
-that he has got it; disappoints her by not returning at the time he
-has promised to wed her, and when he returns, creates no small consternation
-by the oddity of his dress and equipage. This, however,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_343'>343</span>is nothing to the astonishment excited by his mad-brained behaviour
-at the marriage. Here is the account of it by an eye-witness:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Gremio.</em> Tut, she’s a lamb, a dove, a fool to him:</div>
- <div class='line'>I’ll tell you, Sir Lucentio; when the priest</div>
- <div class='line'>Should ask if Katherine should be his wife?</div>
- <div class='line'>Ay, by gogs woons, quoth he; and swore so loud,</div>
- <div class='line'>That, all amaz’d, the priest let fall the book;</div>
- <div class='line'>And as he stooped again to take it up,</div>
- <div class='line'>This mad-brain’d bridegroom took him such a cuff,</div>
- <div class='line'>That down fell priest and book, and book and priest.</div>
- <div class='line'>Now take them up, quoth he, if any list.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Tranio.</em> What said the wench when he rose up again?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Gremio.</em> Trembled and shook; for why, he stamp’d and swore,</div>
- <div class='line'>As if the vicar meant to cozen him.</div>
- <div class='line'>But after many ceremonies done,</div>
- <div class='line'>He calls for wine; a health, quoth he; as if</div>
- <div class='line'>He’ad been aboard carousing with his mates</div>
- <div class='line'>After a storm; quaft off the muscadel,</div>
- <div class='line'>And threw the sops all in the sexton’s face;</div>
- <div class='line'>Having no other cause but that his beard</div>
- <div class='line'>Grew thin and hungerly, and seem’d to ask</div>
- <div class='line'>His sops as he was drinking. This done, he took</div>
- <div class='line'>The bride about the neck, and kiss’d her lips</div>
- <div class='line'>With such a clamourous smack, that at their parting</div>
- <div class='line'>All the church echoed: and I seeing this,</div>
- <div class='line'>Came thence for very shame; and after me,</div>
- <div class='line'>I know, the rout is coming;—</div>
- <div class='line'>Such a mad marriage never was before.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The most striking and at the same time laughable feature in the
-character of Petruchio throughout, is the studied approximation to
-the intractable character of real madness, his apparent insensibility to
-all external considerations, and utter indifference to every thing but
-the wild and extravagant freaks of his own self-will. There is no
-contending with a person on whom nothing makes any impression but
-his own purposes, and who is bent on his own whims just in proportion
-as they seem to want common sense. With him a thing’s being
-plain and reasonable is a reason against it. The airs he gives himself
-are infinite, and his caprices as sudden as they are groundless. The
-whole of his treatment of his wife at home is in the same spirit of
-ironical attention and inverted gallantry. Every thing flies before
-his will, like a conjuror’s wand, and he only metamorphoses his
-wife’s temper by metamorphosing her senses and all the objects she
-sees, at a word’s speaking. Such are his insisting that it is the moon
-and not the sun which they see, etc. This extravagance reaches its
-most pleasant and poetical height in the scene where, on their return
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_344'>344</span>to her father’s, they meet old Vincentio, whom Petruchio immediately
-addresses as a young lady:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Petruchio.</em> Good morrow, gentle mistress, where away?</div>
- <div class='line'>Tell me, sweet Kate, and tell me truly too,</div>
- <div class='line'>Hast thou beheld a fresher gentlewoman?</div>
- <div class='line'>Such war of white and red within her cheeks;</div>
- <div class='line'>What stars do spangle heaven with such beauty,</div>
- <div class='line'>As those two eyes become that heav’nly face?</div>
- <div class='line'>Fair lovely maid, once more good day to thee:</div>
- <div class='line'>Sweet Kate, embrace her for her beauty’s sake.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Hortensio.</em> He’ll make the man mad to make a woman of him.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Katherine.</em> Young budding virgin, fair and fresh and sweet,</div>
- <div class='line'>Whither away, or where is thy abode?</div>
- <div class='line'>Happy the parents of so fair a child;</div>
- <div class='line'>Happier the man whom favourable stars</div>
- <div class='line'>Allot thee for his lovely bed-fellow.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Petruchio.</em> Why, how now, Kate, I hope thou art not mad:</div>
- <div class='line'>This is a man, old, wrinkled, faded, wither’d,</div>
- <div class='line'>And not a maiden, as thou say’st he is.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Katherine.</em> Pardon, old father, my mistaken eyes</div>
- <div class='line'>That have been so bedazed with the sun</div>
- <div class='line'>That everything I look on seemeth green.</div>
- <div class='line'>Now I perceive thou art a reverend father.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The whole is carried off with equal spirit, as if the poet’s comic
-Muse had wings of fire. It is strange how one man could be so
-many things; but so it is. The concluding scene, in which trial is
-made of the obedience of the new-married wives (so triumphantly for
-Petruchio) is a very happy one.—In some parts of this play there
-is a little too much about music-masters and masters of philosophy.
-They were things of greater rarity in those days than they are now.
-Nothing however can be better than the advice which Tranio gives
-his master for the prosecution of his studies:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘The mathematics, and the metaphysics,</div>
- <div class='line'>Fall to them as you find your stomach serves you:</div>
- <div class='line'>No profit grows, where is no pleasure ta’en:</div>
- <div class='line'>In brief, sir, study what you most affect.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>We have heard the <cite>Honey-Moon</cite> called ‘an elegant Katherine and
-Petruchio.’ We suspect we do not understand this word <em>elegant</em> in
-the sense that many people do. But in our sense of the word, we
-should call Lucentio’s description of his mistress elegant.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Tranio, I saw her coral lips to move,</div>
- <div class='line'>And with her breath she did perfume the air:</div>
- <div class='line'>Sacred and sweet was all I saw in her.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_345'>345</span>When Biondello tells the same Lucentio for his encouragement, ‘I
-knew a wench married in an afternoon as she went to the garden for
-parsley to stuff a rabbit, and so may you, sir’—there is nothing
-elegant in this, and yet we hardly know which of the two passages is
-the best.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='sc'>The Taming of the Shrew</span> is a play within a play. It is supposed
-to be a play acted for the benefit of Sly the tinker, who is made to
-believe himself a lord, when he wakes after a drunken brawl. The
-character of Sly and the remarks with which he accompanies the play
-are as good as the play itself. His answer when he is asked how
-he likes it, ‘Indifferent well; ’tis a good piece of work, would ‘twere
-done,’ is in good keeping, as if he were thinking of his Saturday
-night’s job. Sly does not change his tastes with his new situation,
-but in the midst of splendour and luxury still calls out lustily and
-repeatedly ‘for a pot o’ the smallest ale.’ He is very slow in giving
-up his personal identity in his sudden advancement.—‘I am Christophero
-Sly, call not me honour nor lordship. I ne’er drank sack
-in my life: and if you give me any conserves, give me conserves of
-beef: ne’er ask me what raiment I’ll wear, for I have no more
-doublets than backs, no more stockings than legs, nor no more shoes
-than feet, nay, sometimes more feet than shoes, or such shoes as my
-toes look through the over-leather.—What, would you make me
-mad? Am not I Christophero Sly, old Sly’s son of Burton-heath,
-by birth a pedlar, by education a card-maker, by transmutation a
-bear-herd, and now by present profession a tinker? Ask Marian
-Hacket, the fat alewife of Wincot, if she know me not; if she say
-I am not fourteen-pence on the score for sheer ale, score me up for
-the lying’st knave in Christendom.’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This is honest. ‘The Slies are no rogues,’ as he says of himself.
-We have a great predilection for this representative of the family;
-and what makes us like him the better is, that we take him to be of
-kin (not many degrees removed) to Sancho Panza.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>MEASURE FOR MEASURE</h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>This is a play as full of genius as it is of wisdom. Yet there is an
-original sin in the nature of the subject, which prevents us from
-taking a cordial interest in it. ‘The height of moral argument’
-which the author has maintained in the intervals of passion or blended
-with the more powerful impulses of nature, is hardly surpassed in any
-of his plays. But there is in general a want of passion; the affections
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_346'>346</span>are at a stand; our sympathies are repulsed and defeated in all
-directions. The only passion which influences the story is that of
-Angelo; and yet he seems to have a much greater passion for
-hypocrisy than for his mistress. Neither are we greatly enamoured
-of Isabella’s rigid chastity, though she could not act otherwise than
-she did. We do not feel the same confidence in the virtue that is
-‘sublimely good’ at another’s expense, as if it had been put to some
-less disinterested trial. As to the Duke, who makes a very imposing
-and mysterious stage-character, he is more absorbed in his own
-plots and gravity than anxious for the welfare of the state; more
-tenacious of his own character than attentive to the feelings and
-apprehensions of others. Claudio is the only person who feels
-naturally; and yet he is placed in circumstances of distress which
-almost preclude the wish for his deliverance. Mariana is also in
-love with Angelo, whom we hate. In this respect, there may be
-said to be a general system of cross-purposes between the feelings
-of the different characters and the sympathy of the reader or the
-audience. This principle of repugnance seems to have reached its
-height in the character of Master Barnardine, who not only sets at
-defiance the opinions of others, but has even thrown off all self-regard,—‘one
-that apprehends death no more dreadfully but as a
-drunken sleep; careless, reckless, and fearless of what’s past, present,
-and to come.’ He is a fine antithesis to the morality and the hypocrisy
-of the other characters of the play. Barnardine is Caliban
-transported from Prospero’s wizard island to the forests of Bohemia
-or the prisons of Vienna. He is the creature of bad habits as Caliban
-is of gross instincts. He has however a strong notion of the natural
-fitness of things, according to his own sensations—‘He has been
-drinking hard all night, and he will not be hanged that day’—and
-Shakespear has let him off at last. We do not understand why the
-philosophical German critic, Schlegel, should be so severe on those
-pleasant persons, Lucio, Pompey, and Master Froth, as to call them
-‘wretches.’ They appear all mighty comfortable in their occupations,
-and determined to pursue them, ‘as the flesh and fortune should
-serve.’ A very good exposure of the want of self-knowledge and
-contempt for others, which is so common in the world, is put into
-the mouth of Abhorson, the jailor, when the Provost proposes to
-associate Pompey with him in his office—‘A bawd, sir? Fie upon
-him, he will discredit our mystery.’ And the same answer will
-serve in nine instances out of ten to the same kind of remark, ‘Go
-to, sir, you weigh equally; a feather will turn the scale.’ Shakespear
-was in one sense the least moral of all writers; for morality
-(commonly so called) is made up of antipathies; and his talent consisted
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_347'>347</span>in sympathy with human nature, in all its shapes, degrees,
-depressions, and elevations. The object of the pedantic moralist
-is to find out the bad in everything: his was to shew that ‘there
-is some soul of goodness in things evil.’ Even Master Barnardine
-is not left to the mercy of what others think of him; but when he
-comes in, speaks for himself, and pleads his own cause, as well as if
-counsel had been assigned him. In one sense, Shakespear was no
-moralist at all: in another, he was the greatest of all moralists. He
-was a moralist in the same sense in which nature is one. He taught
-what he had learnt from her. He shewed the greatest knowledge
-of humanity with the greatest fellow-feeling for it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>One of the most dramatic passages in the present play is the interview
-between Claudio and his sister, when she comes to inform him
-of the conditions on which Angelo will spare his life.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Claudio.</em> Let me know the point.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Isabella.</em> O, I do fear thee, Claudio: and I quake,</div>
- <div class='line'>Lest thou a feverous life should’st entertain,</div>
- <div class='line'>And six or seven winters more respect</div>
- <div class='line'>Than a perpetual honour. Dar’st thou die?</div>
- <div class='line'>The sense of death is most in apprehension;</div>
- <div class='line'>And the poor beetle, that we tread upon,</div>
- <div class='line'>In corporal sufferance finds a pang as great</div>
- <div class='line'>As when a giant dies.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Claudio.</em> Why give you me this shame?</div>
- <div class='line'>Think you I can a resolution fetch</div>
- <div class='line'>From flowery tenderness; if I must die,</div>
- <div class='line'>I will encounter darkness as a bride,</div>
- <div class='line'>And hug it in mine arms.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Isabella.</em> There spake my brother! there my father’s grave</div>
- <div class='line'>Did utter forth a voice! Yes, thou must die:</div>
- <div class='line'>Thou art too noble to conserve a life</div>
- <div class='line'>In base appliances. This outward-sainted deputy—</div>
- <div class='line'>Whose settled visage and deliberate word</div>
- <div class='line'>Nips youth i’ the head, and follies doth emmew,</div>
- <div class='line'>As faulcon doth the fowl—is yet a devil.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Claudio.</em> The princely Angelo?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Isabella.</em> Oh, ’tis the cunning livery of hell,</div>
- <div class='line'>The damned’st body to invest and cover</div>
- <div class='line'>In princely guards! Dost thou think, Claudio,</div>
- <div class='line'>If I would yield him my virginity,</div>
- <div class='line'>Thou might’st be freed?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Claudio.</em> Oh, heavens! it cannot be.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Isabella.</em> Yes, he would give it thee, for this rank offence,</div>
- <div class='line'>So to offend him still: this night’s the time</div>
- <div class='line'>That I should do what I abhor to name,</div>
- <div class='line'>Or else thou dy’st to-morrow.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_348'>348</span><em>Claudio.</em> Thou shalt not do’t.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Isabella.</em> Oh, were it but my life,</div>
- <div class='line'>I’d throw it down for your deliverance</div>
- <div class='line'>As frankly as a pin.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Claudio.</em> Thanks, dear Isabel.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Isabella.</em> Be ready, Claudio, for your death to-morrow.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Claudio.</em> Yes.—Has he affections in him,</div>
- <div class='line'>That thus can make him bite the law by the nose?</div>
- <div class='line'>When he would force it, sure it is no sin;</div>
- <div class='line'>Or of the deadly seven it is the least.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Isabella.</em> Which is the least?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Claudio.</em> If it were damnable, he, being so wise,</div>
- <div class='line'>Why would he for the momentary trick</div>
- <div class='line'>Be perdurably fin’d? Oh, Isabel!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Isabella.</em> What says my brother?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Claudio.</em> Death is a fearful thing.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Isabella.</em> And shamed life a hateful.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Claudio.</em> Aye, but to die, and go we know not where;</div>
- <div class='line'>To lie in cold obstruction, and to rot;</div>
- <div class='line'>This sensible warm motion to become</div>
- <div class='line'>A kneaded clod; and the delighted spirit</div>
- <div class='line'>To bathe in fiery floods, or to reside</div>
- <div class='line'>In thrilling regions of thick-ribbed ice;</div>
- <div class='line'>To be imprison’d in the viewless winds,</div>
- <div class='line'>And blown with restless violence round about</div>
- <div class='line'>The pendant world; or to be worse than worst</div>
- <div class='line'>Of those, that lawless and incertain thoughts</div>
- <div class='line'>Imagine howling!—’tis too horrible!</div>
- <div class='line'>The weariest and most loathed worldly life,</div>
- <div class='line'>That age, ache, penury, and imprisonment</div>
- <div class='line'>Can lay on nature, is a paradise</div>
- <div class='line'>To what we fear of death.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Isabella.</em> Alas! alas!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Claudio.</em> Sweet sister, let me live:</div>
- <div class='line'>What sin you do to save a brother’s life,</div>
- <div class='line'>Nature dispenses with the deed so far,</div>
- <div class='line'>That it becomes a virtue.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>What adds to the dramatic beauty of this scene and the effect of
-Claudio’s passionate attachment to life is, that it immediately follows
-the Duke’s lecture to him, in the character of the Friar, recommending
-an absolute indifference to it.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in12'>—‘Reason thus with life,—</div>
- <div class='line'>If I do lose thee, I do lose a thing,</div>
- <div class='line'>That none but fools would keep: a breath thou art,</div>
- <div class='line'>Servile to all the skyey influences</div>
- <div class='line'>That do this habitation, where thou keep’st,</div>
- <div class='line'>Hourly afflict; merely, thou art death’s fool;</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_349'>349</span>For him thou labour’st by thy flight to shun,</div>
- <div class='line'>And yet run’st toward him still: thou art not noble;</div>
- <div class='line'>For all the accommodations, that thou bear’st,</div>
- <div class='line'>Are nurs’d by baseness: thou art by no means valiant;</div>
- <div class='line'>For thou dost fear the soft and tender fork</div>
- <div class='line'>Of a poor worm: thy best of rest is sleep,</div>
- <div class='line'>And that thou oft provok’st; yet grossly fear’st</div>
- <div class='line'>Thy death, which is no more. Thou art not thyself;</div>
- <div class='line'>For thou exist’st on many a thousand grains</div>
- <div class='line'>That issue out of dust: happy thou art not;</div>
- <div class='line'>For what thou hast not, still thou striv’st to get;</div>
- <div class='line'>And what thou hast, forget’st: thou art not certain;</div>
- <div class='line'>For thy complexion shifts to strange effects,</div>
- <div class='line'>After the moon: if thou art rich, thou art poor;</div>
- <div class='line'>For, like an ass, whose back with ingots bows</div>
- <div class='line'>Thou bear’st thy heavy riches but a journey,</div>
- <div class='line'>And death unloads thee: friend thou hast none;</div>
- <div class='line'>For thy own bowels, which do call thee sire,</div>
- <div class='line'>The mere effusion of thy proper loins,</div>
- <div class='line'>Do curse the gout, serpigo, and the rheum,</div>
- <div class='line'>For ending thee no sooner; thou hast nor youth, nor age;</div>
- <div class='line'>But, as it were, an after-dinner’s sleep,</div>
- <div class='line'>Dreaming on both: for all thy blessed youth</div>
- <div class='line'>Becomes as aged, and doth beg the alms</div>
- <div class='line'>Of palsied eld; and when thou art old, and rich,</div>
- <div class='line'>Thou hast neither heat, affection, limb, nor beauty,</div>
- <div class='line'>To make thy riches pleasant. What’s yet in this,</div>
- <div class='line'>That bears the name of life? Yet in this life</div>
- <div class='line'>Lie hid more thousand deaths; yet death we fear,</div>
- <div class='line'>That makes these odds all even.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>THE MERRY WIVES OF WINDSOR</h3>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='sc'>The Merry Wives of Windsor</span> is no doubt a very amusing play, with
-a great deal of humour, character, and nature in it: but we should
-have liked it much better, if any one else had been the hero of it,
-instead of Falstaff. We could have been contented if Shakespear
-had not been ‘commanded to shew the knight in love.’ Wits and
-philosophers, for the most part, do not shine in that character; and
-Sir John himself, by no means, comes off with flying colours. Many
-people complain of the degradation and insults to which Don Quixote
-is so frequently exposed in his various adventures. But what are
-the unconscious indignities which he suffers, compared with the
-sensible mortifications which Falstaff is made to bring upon himself?
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_350'>350</span>What are the blows and buffetings which the Don receives from
-the staves of the Yanguesian carriers or from Sancho Panza’s more
-hard-hearted hands, compared with the contamination of the buck-basket,
-the disguise of the fat woman of Brentford, and the horns of
-Herne the hunter, which are discovered on Sir John’s head? In
-reading the play, we indeed wish him well through all these discomfitures,
-but it would have been as well if he had not got into
-them. Falstaff in the <span class='sc'>Merry Wives of Windsor</span> is not the man he
-was in the two parts of <cite>Henry IV.</cite> His wit and eloquence have
-left him. Instead of making a butt of others, he is made a butt of
-by them. Neither is there a single particle of love in him to excuse
-his follies: he is merely a designing, bare-faced knave, and an unsuccessful
-one. The scene with Ford as Master Brook, and that
-with Simple, Slender’s man, who comes to ask after the Wise Woman,
-are almost the only ones in which his old intellectual ascendancy
-appears. He is like a person recalled to the stage to perform an
-unaccustomed and ungracious part; and in which we perceive only
-‘some faint sparks of those flashes of merriment, that were wont to
-set the hearers in a roar.’ But the single scene with Doll Tearsheet,
-or Mrs. Quickly’s account of his desiring ‘to eat some of
-housewife Reach’s prawns,’ and telling her ‘to be no more so
-familiarity with such people,’ is worth the whole of the <span class='sc'>Merry
-Wives of Windsor</span> put together. Ford’s jealousy, which is the main
-spring of the comic incidents, is certainly very well managed. Page,
-on the contrary, appears to be somewhat uxorious in his disposition;
-and we have pretty plain indications of the effect of the characters
-of the husbands on the different degrees of fidelity in their wives.
-Mrs. Quickly makes a very lively go-between, both between Falstaff
-and his Dulcineas, and Anne Page and her lovers, and seems in the
-latter case so intent on her own interest as totally to overlook the
-intentions of her employers. Her master, Dr. Caius, the Frenchman,
-and her fellow-servant Jack Rugby, are very completely described.
-This last-mentioned person is rather quaintly commended
-by Mrs. Quickly as ‘an honest, willing, kind fellow, as ever servant
-shall come in house withal, and I warrant you, no tell-tale, nor no
-breed-bate; his worst fault is, that he is given to prayer; he is
-something peevish that way; but nobody but has his fault.’ The
-Welch Parson, Sir Hugh Evans (a title which in those days was
-given to the clergy) is an excellent character in all respects. He
-is as respectable as he is laughable. He has ‘very good discretions,
-and very odd humours.’ The duel-scene with Caius gives him an
-opportunity to shew his ‘cholers and his tremblings of mind,’ his
-valour and his melancholy, in an irresistible manner. In the dialogue,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_351'>351</span>which at his mother’s request he holds with his pupil, William Page,
-to shew his progress in learning, it is hard to say whether the simplicity
-of the master or the scholar is the greatest. Nym, Bardolph,
-and Pistol, are but the shadows of what they were; and Justice
-Shallow himself has little of his consequence left. But his cousin,
-Slender, makes up for the deficiency. He is a very potent piece
-of imbecility. In him the pretensions of the worthy Gloucestershire
-family are well kept up, and immortalised. He and his friend
-Sackerson and his book of songs and his love of Anne Page and his
-having nothing to say to her can never be forgotten. It is the only
-first-rate character in the play: but it is in that class. Shakespear
-is the only writer who was as great in describing weakness as strength.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>THE COMEDY OF ERRORS</h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>This comedy is taken very much from the Menæchmi of Plautus,
-and is not an improvement on it. Shakespear appears to have
-bestowed no great pains on it, and there are but a few passages
-which bear the decided stamp of his genius. He seems to have
-relied on his author, and on the interest arising out of the intricacy
-of the plot. The curiosity excited is certainly very considerable,
-though not of the most pleasing kind. We are teazed as with a
-riddle, which notwithstanding we try to solve. In reading the play,
-from the sameness of the names of the two Antipholises and the two
-Dromios, as well from their being constantly taken for each other
-by those who see them, it is difficult, without a painful effort of
-attention, to keep the characters distinct in the mind. And again,
-on the stage, either the complete similarity of their persons and dress
-must produce the same perplexity whenever they first enter, or the
-identity of appearance which the story supposes, will be destroyed.
-We still, however, having a clue to the difficulty, can tell which is
-which, merely from the practical contradictions which arise, as soon
-as the different parties begin to speak; and we are indemnified for
-the perplexity and blunders into which we are thrown by seeing
-others thrown into greater and almost inextricable ones.—This play
-(among other considerations) leads us not to feel much regret that
-Shakespear was not what is called a classical scholar. We do not
-think his <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">forte</span></i> would ever have lain in imitating or improving on what
-others invented, so much as in inventing for himself, and perfecting
-what he invented,—not perhaps by the omission of faults, but by the
-addition of the highest excellencies. His own genius was strong
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_352'>352</span>enough to bear him up, and he soared longest and best on unborrowed
-plumes.—The only passage of a very Shakespearian cast in this
-comedy is the one in which the Abbess, with admirable characteristic
-artifice, makes Adriana confess her own misconduct in driving
-her husband mad.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Abbess.</em> How long hath this possession held the man?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Adriana.</em> This week he hath been heavy, sour, sad,</div>
- <div class='line'>And much, much different from the man he was;</div>
- <div class='line'>But, till this afternoon, his passion</div>
- <div class='line'>Ne’er brake into extremity of rage.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Abbess.</em> Hath he not lost much wealth by wreck at sea?</div>
- <div class='line'>Bury’d some dear friend? Hath not else his eye</div>
- <div class='line'>Stray’d his affection in unlawful love?</div>
- <div class='line'>A sin prevailing much in youthful men,</div>
- <div class='line'>Who give their eyes the liberty of gazing.</div>
- <div class='line'>Which of these sorrows is he subject to?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Adriana.</em> To none of these, except it be the last:</div>
- <div class='line'>Namely, some love, that drew him oft from home.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Abbess.</em> You should for that have reprehended him.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Adriana.</em> Why, so I did.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Abbess.</em> But not rough enough.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Adriana.</em> As roughly as my modesty would let me.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Abbess.</em> Haply, in private.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Adriana.</em> And in assemblies too.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Abbess.</em> Aye, but not enough.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Adriana.</em> It was the copy of our conference:</div>
- <div class='line'>In bed, he slept not for my urging it;</div>
- <div class='line'>At board, he fed not for my urging it;</div>
- <div class='line'>Alone it was the subject of my theme;</div>
- <div class='line'>In company, I often glanc’d at it;</div>
- <div class='line'>Still did I tell him it was vile and bad.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Abbess.</em> And therefore came it that the man was mad:</div>
- <div class='line'>The venom’d clamours of a jealous woman</div>
- <div class='line'>Poison more deadly than a mad dog’s tooth.</div>
- <div class='line'>It seems, his sleeps were hinder’d by thy railing:</div>
- <div class='line'>And therefore comes it that his head is light.</div>
- <div class='line'>Thou say’st his meat was sauc’d with thy upbraidings:</div>
- <div class='line'>Unquiet meals make ill digestions,</div>
- <div class='line'>Therefore the raging fire of fever bred:</div>
- <div class='line'>And what’s a fever but a fit of madness?</div>
- <div class='line'>Thou say’st his sports were hinder’d by thy brawls:</div>
- <div class='line'>Sweet recreation barr’d, what doth ensue,</div>
- <div class='line'>But moody and dull melancholy,</div>
- <div class='line'>Kinsman to grim and comfortless despair;</div>
- <div class='line'>And, at her heels, a huge infectious troop</div>
- <div class='line'>Of pale distemperatures, and foes to life?</div>
- <div class='line'>In food, in sport, and life-preserving rest</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_353'>353</span>To be disturb’d, would mad or man or beast:</div>
- <div class='line'>The consequence is then, thy jealous fits</div>
- <div class='line'>Have scar’d thy husband from the use of wits.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Luciana.</em> She never reprehended him but mildly,</div>
- <div class='line'>When he demeaned himself rough, rude, and wildly.—</div>
- <div class='line'>Why bear you these rebukes, and answer not?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Adriana.</em> She did betray me to my own reproof.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Pinch the conjuror is also an excrescence not to be found in
-Plautus. He is indeed a very formidable anachronism.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘They brought one Pinch, a hungry lean-fac’d villain,</div>
- <div class='line'>A meer anatomy, a mountebank,</div>
- <div class='line'>A thread-bare juggler and a fortune-teller;</div>
- <div class='line'>A needy, hollow-ey’d, sharp-looking wretch,</div>
- <div class='line'>A living dead man.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>This is exactly like some of the Puritanical portraits to be met with
-in Hogarth.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>DOUBTFUL PLAYS OF SHAKESPEAR</h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>We shall give for the satisfaction of the reader what the celebrated
-German critic, Schlegel, says on this subject, and then add a very
-few remarks of our own.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'>‘All the editors, with the exception of Capell, are unanimous in rejecting
-<cite>Titus Andronicus</cite> as unworthy of Shakespear, though they always allow
-it to be printed with the other pieces, as the scape-goat, as it were, of their
-abusive criticism. The correct method in such an investigation is first to
-examine into the external grounds, evidences, etc. and to weigh their
-worth; and then to adduce the internal reasons derived from the quality
-of the work. The critics of Shakespear follow a course directly the reverse
-of this; they set out with a preconceived opinion against a piece, and seek,
-in justification of this opinion, to render the historical grounds suspicious,
-and to set them aside. <cite>Titus Andronicus</cite> is to be found in the first folio
-edition of Shakespear’s works, which it was known was conducted by
-Heminge and Condell, for many years his friends and fellow-managers of
-the same theatre. Is it possible to persuade ourselves that they would not
-have known if a piece in their repertory did or did not actually belong to
-Shakespear? And are we to lay to the charge of these honourable men
-a designed fraud in this single case, when we know that they did not shew
-themselves so very desirous of scraping everything together which went
-by the name of Shakespear, but, as it appears, merely gave those plays of
-which they had manuscripts in hand? Yet the following circumstance is
-still stronger: George Meres, a contemporary and admirer of Shakespear,
-mentions <cite>Titus Andronicus</cite> in an enumeration of his works, in the year 1598.
-Meres was personally acquainted with the poet, and so very intimately, that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_354'>354</span>the latter read over to him his Sonnets before they were printed. I cannot
-conceive that all the critical scepticism in the world would be sufficient to
-get over such a testimony.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'>‘This tragedy, it is true, is framed according to a false idea of the
-tragic, which by an accumulation of cruelties and enormities degenerates
-into the horrible, and yet leaves no deep impression behind: the story of
-Tereus and Philomela is heightened and overcharged under other names,
-and mixed up with the repast of Atreus and Thyestes, and many other incidents.
-In detail there is no want of beautiful lines, bold images, nay,
-even features which betray the peculiar conception of Shakespear. Among
-these we may reckon the joy of the treacherous Moor at the blackness and
-ugliness of his child begot in adultery; and in the compassion of Titus
-Andronicus, grown childish through grief, for a fly which had been struck
-dead, and his rage afterwards when he imagines he discovers in it his black
-enemy, we recognize the future poet of <cite>Lear</cite>. Are the critics afraid that
-Shakespear’s fame would be injured, were it established that in his early
-youth he ushered into the world a feeble and immature work? Was Rome
-the less the conqueror of the world because Remus could leap over its first
-walls? Let any one place himself in Shakespear’s situation at the commencement
-of his career. He found only a few indifferent models, and
-yet these met with the most favourable reception, because men are never
-difficult to please in the novelty of an art before their taste has become
-fastidious from choice and abundance. Must not this situation have had
-its influence on him before he learned to make higher demands on himself,
-and, by digging deeper in his own mind, discovered the richest veins of a
-noble metal? It is even highly probable that he must have made several
-failures before getting into the right path. Genius is in a certain sense
-infallible, and has nothing to learn; but art is to be learned, and must be
-acquired by practice and experience. In Shakespear’s acknowledged works
-we find hardly any traces of his apprenticeship, and yet an apprenticeship
-he certainly had. This every artist must have, and especially in a period
-where he has not before him the example of a school already formed. I
-consider it as extremely probable, that Shakespear began to write for the
-theatre at a much earlier period than the one which is generally stated,
-namely, not till after the year 1590. It appears that, as early as the year
-1584, when only twenty years of age, he had left his paternal home and
-repaired to London. Can we imagine that such an active head would
-remain idle for six whole years without making any attempt to emerge by
-his talents from an uncongenial situation? That in the dedication of the
-poem of Venus and Adonis he calls it, ‘the first heir of his invention,’
-proves nothing against the supposition. It was the first which he printed;
-he might have composed it at an earlier period; perhaps, also, he did not
-include theatrical labours, as they then possessed but little literary dignity.
-The earlier Shakespear began to compose for the theatre, the less are we
-enabled to consider the immaturity and imperfection of a work as a proof
-of its spuriousness in opposition to historical evidence, if we only find in it
-prominent features of his mind. Several of the works rejected as spurious,
-may still have been produced in the period betwixt <cite>Titus Andronicus</cite>, and
-the earliest of the acknowledged pieces.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><span class='pageno' id='Page_355'>355</span>‘At last, Steevens published seven pieces ascribed to Shakespear in two
-supplementary volumes. It is to be remarked, that they all appeared in
-print in Shakespear’s life-time, with his name prefixed at full length.
-They are the following:—</p>
-
-<p class='c016'>‘1. <em>Locrine.</em> The proofs of the genuineness of this piece are not altogether
-unambiguous; the grounds for doubt, on the other hand, are
-entitled to attention. However, this question is immediately connected
-with that respecting <cite>Titus Andronicus</cite>, and must be at the same time resolved
-in the affirmative or negative.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'>‘2. <cite>Pericles, Prince of Tyre.</cite> This piece was acknowledged by Dryden,
-but as a youthful work of Shakespear. It is most undoubtedly his, and it
-has been admitted into several of the late editions. The supposed imperfections
-originate in the circumstance, that Shakespear here handled a childish
-and extravagant romance of the old poet Gower, and was unwilling to
-drag the subject out of its proper sphere. Hence he even introduces
-Gower himself, and makes him deliver a prologue entirely in his antiquated
-language and versification. This power of assuming so foreign a manner
-is at least no proof of helplessness.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'>‘3. <cite>The London Prodigal.</cite> If we are not mistaken, Lessing pronounced
-this piece to be Shakespear’s, and wished to bring it on the German stage.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'>‘4. <cite>The Puritan; or, the Widows of Watling Street.</cite> One of my literary
-friends, intimately acquainted with Shakespear, was of opinion that the
-poet must have wished to write a play for once in the style of Ben Jonson,
-and that in this way we must account for the difference between the present
-piece and his usual manner. To follow out this idea however would lead
-to a very nice critical investigation.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'>‘5. <cite>Thomas, Lord Cromwell.</cite></p>
-
-<p class='c016'>‘6. <cite>Sir John Oldcastle—First Part.</cite></p>
-
-<p class='c016'>‘7. <cite>A Yorkshire Tragedy.</cite></p>
-
-<p class='c016'>‘The three last pieces are not only unquestionably Shakespear’s, but in
-my opinion they deserve to be classed among his best and maturest
-works.—Steevens admits at last, in some degree, that they are Shakespear’s,
-as well as the others, excepting <em>Locrine</em>, but he speaks of all of them with
-great contempt, as quite worthless productions. This condemnatory
-sentence is not however in the slightest degree convincing, nor is it supported
-by critical acumen. I should like to see how such a critic would, of
-his own natural suggestion, have decided on Shakespear’s acknowledged
-master-pieces, and what he would have thought of praising in them, had
-the public opinion not imposed on him the duty of admiration. <cite>Thomas,
-Lord Cromwell</cite>, and <em>Sir John Oldcastle</em>, are biographical dramas, and
-models in this species: the first is linked, from its subject, to <cite>Henry the
-Eighth</cite>, and the second to <cite>Henry the Fifth</cite>. The second part of <em>Oldcastle</em>
-is wanting; I know not whether a copy of the old edition has been discovered
-in England, or whether it is lost. <cite>The Yorkshire Tragedy</cite> is a
-tragedy in one act, a dramatised tale of murder: the tragical effect is overpowering,
-and it is extremely important to see how poetically Shakespear
-could handle such a subject.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'>‘There have been still farther ascribed to him:—1st. <cite>The Merry Devil
-of Edmonton</cite>, a comedy in one act, printed in Dodsley’s old plays. This
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_356'>356</span>has certainly some appearances in its favour. It contains a merry landlord,
-who bears a great similarity to the one in the <cite>Merry Wives of Windsor</cite>.
-However, at all events, though an ingenious, it is but a hasty sketch.
-2d. <cite>The Accusation of Paris.</cite> 3d. <cite>The Birth of Merlin.</cite> 4th. <cite>Edward the
-Third.</cite> 5th. <cite>The Fair Emma.</cite> 6th. <cite>Mucedorus.</cite> 7th. <cite>Arden of Feversham.</cite>
-I have never seen any of these, and cannot therefore say anything
-respecting them. From the passages cited, I am led to conjecture that the
-subject of <cite>Mucedorus</cite> is the popular story of Valentine and Orson;
-a beautiful subject which Lope de Vega has also taken for a play.
-<cite>Arden of Feversham</cite> is said to be a tragedy on the story of a man, from
-whom the poet was descended by the mother’s side. If the quality of the
-piece is not too directly at variance with this claim, the circumstance would
-afford an additional probability in its favour. For such motives were not
-foreign to Shakespear: he treated Henry the Seventh, who bestowed lands
-on his forefathers for services performed by them, with a visible partiality.</p>
-
-<p class='c016'>‘Whoever takes from Shakespear a play early ascribed to him, and confessedly
-belonging to his time, is unquestionably bound to answer, with
-some degree of probability, this question: who has then written it? Shakespear’s
-competitors in the dramatic walk are pretty well known, and if
-those of them who have even acquired a considerable name, a Lilly, a
-Marlow, a Heywood, are still so very far below him, we can hardly imagine
-that the author of a work, which rises so high beyond theirs, would have
-remained unknown.’—<cite>Lectures on Dramatic Literature</cite>, vol. ii. page 252.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>We agree to the truth of this last observation, but not to the justice
-of its application to some of the plays here mentioned. It is true
-that Shakespear’s best works are very superior to those of Marlow,
-or Heywood, but it is not true that the best of the doubtful plays
-above enumerated are superior or even equal to the best of theirs.
-<cite>The Yorkshire Tragedy</cite>, which Schlegel speaks of as an undoubted
-production of our author’s, is much more in the manner of Heywood
-than of Shakespear. The effect is indeed overpowering, but the
-mode of producing it is by no means poetical. The praise which
-Schlegel gives to <cite>Thomas, Lord Cromwell</cite>, and to <em>Sir John Oldcastle</em>,
-is altogether exaggerated. They are very indifferent compositions,
-which have not the slightest pretensions to rank with <cite>Henry V.</cite> or
-<cite>Henry VIII.</cite> We suspect that the German critic was not very well
-acquainted with the dramatic contemporaries of Shakespear, or aware
-of their general merits; and that he accordingly mistakes a resemblance
-in style and manner for an equal degree of excellence. Shakespear
-differed from the other writers of his age not in the mode of
-treating his subjects, but in the grace and power which he displayed
-in them. The reason assigned by a literary friend of Schlegel’s for
-supposing <cite>The Puritan; or, the Widow of Watling Street</cite>, to be
-Shakespear’s, viz. that it is in the style of Ben Jonson, that is to say,
-in a style just the reverse of his own, is not very satisfactory to a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_357'>357</span>plain English understanding. <cite>Locrine</cite>, and <cite>The London Prodigal</cite>, if they
-were Shakespear’s at all, must have been among the sins of his youth.
-<cite>Arden of Feversham</cite> contains several striking passages, but the passion
-which they express is rather that of a sanguine temperament than of
-a lofty imagination; and in this respect they approximate more nearly
-to the style of other writers of the time than to Shakespear’s. <cite>Titus
-Andronicus</cite> is certainly as unlike Shakespear’s usual style as it is
-possible. It is an accumulation of vulgar physical horrors, in which
-the power exercised by the poet bears no proportion to the repugnance
-excited by the subject. The character of Aaron the Moor is the
-only thing which shews any originality of conception; and the scene
-in which he expresses his joy ‘at the blackness and ugliness of his
-child begot in adultery,’ the only one worthy of Shakespear. Even
-this is worthy of him only in the display of power, for it gives no
-pleasure. Shakespear managed these things differently. Nor do we
-think it a sufficient answer to say that this was an embryo or crude
-production of the author. In its kind it is full grown, and its features
-decided and overcharged. It is not like a first imperfect essay, but
-shews a confirmed habit, a systematic preference of violent effect to
-everything else. There are occasional detached images of great
-beauty and delicacy, but these were not beyond the powers of other
-writers then living. The circumstance which inclines us to reject
-the external evidence in favour of this play being Shakespear’s is,
-that the grammatical construction is constantly false and mixed up
-with vulgar abbreviations, a fault that never occurs in any of his
-genuine plays. A similar defect, and the halting measure of the
-verse are the chief objections to <cite>Pericles of Tyre</cite>, if we except the
-far-fetched and complicated absurdity of the story. The movement
-of the thoughts and passions has something in it not unlike Shakespear,
-and several of the descriptions are either the original hints of
-passages which Shakespear has ingrafted on his other plays, or are
-imitations of them by some contemporary poet. The most memorable
-idea in it is in Marina’s speech, where she compares the world
-to ‘a lasting storm, hurrying her from her friends.’</p>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>POEMS AND SONNETS</h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>Our idolatry of Shakespear (not to say our admiration) ceases with
-his plays. In his other productions, he was a mere author, though
-not a common author. It was only by representing others, that he
-became himself. He could go out of himself, and express the soul
-of Cleopatra; but in his own person, he appeared to be always
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_358'>358</span>waiting for the prompter’s cue. In expressing the thoughts of others,
-he seemed inspired; in expressing his own, he was a mechanic.
-The licence of an assumed character was necessary to restore his
-genius to the privileges of nature, and to give him courage to break
-through the tyranny of fashion, the trammels of custom. In his
-plays, he was ‘as broad and casing as the general air’: in his poems,
-on the contrary, he appears to be ‘cooped, and cabined in’ by all
-the technicalities of art, by all the petty intricacies of thought and
-language, which poetry had learned from the controversial jargon of
-the schools, where words had been made a substitute for things.
-There was, if we mistake not, something of modesty, and a painful
-sense of personal propriety at the bottom of this. Shakespear’s
-imagination, by identifying itself with the strongest characters in the
-most trying circumstances, grappled at once with nature, and trampled
-the littleness of art under his feet: the rapid changes of situation,
-the wide range of the universe, gave him life and spirit, and afforded
-full scope to his genius; but returned into his closet again, and having
-assumed the badge of his profession, he could only labour in his
-vocation, and conform himself to existing models. The thoughts,
-the passions, the words which the poet’s pen, ‘glancing from heaven
-to earth, from earth to heaven,’ lent to others, shook off the
-fetters of pedantry and affectation; while his own thoughts and
-feelings, standing by themselves, were seized upon as lawful prey,
-and tortured to death according to the established rules and practice
-of the day. In a word, we do not like Shakespear’s poems, because
-we like his plays: the one, in all their excellencies, are just the
-reverse of the other. It has been the fashion of late to cry up our
-author’s poems, as equal to his plays: this is the desperate cant of
-modern criticism. We would ask, was there the slightest comparison
-between Shakespear, and either Chaucer or Spenser, as mere poets?
-Not any.—The two poems of Venus and Adonis and of Tarquin
-and Lucrece appear to us like a couple of ice-houses. They are
-about as hard, as glittering, and as cold. The author seems all the
-time to be thinking of his verses, and not of his subject,—not of
-what his characters would feel, but of what he shall say; and as it
-must happen in all such cases, he always puts into their mouths those
-things which they would be the last to think of, and which it shews
-the greatest ingenuity in him to find out. The whole is laboured,
-up-hill work. The poet is perpetually singling out the difficulties of
-the art to make an exhibition of his strength and skill in wrestling
-with them. He is making perpetual trials of them as if his mastery
-over them were doubted. The images, which are often striking, are
-generally applied to things which they are the least like: so that they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_359'>359</span>do not blend with the poem, but seem stuck upon it, like splendid
-patch-work, or remain quite distinct from it, like detached substances,
-painted and varnished over. A beautiful thought is sure to be
-lost in an endless commentary upon it. The speakers are like
-persons who have both leisure and inclination to make riddles on their
-own situation, and to twist and turn every object or incident into
-acrostics and anagrams. Everything is spun out into allegory; and
-a digression is always preferred to the main story. Sentiment is built
-up upon plays of words; the hero or heroine feels, not from the
-impulse of passion, but from the force of dialectics. There is besides
-a strange attempt to substitute the language of painting for that of
-poetry, to make us <em>see</em> their feelings in the faces of the persons; and
-again, consistently with this, in the description of the picture in
-Tarquin and Lucrece, those circumstances are chiefly insisted on,
-which it would be impossible to convey except by words. The invocation
-to opportunity in the Tarquin and Lucrece is full of thoughts
-and images, but at the same time it is overloaded by them. The
-concluding stanza expresses all our objections to this kind of
-poetry:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Oh! idle words, servants to shallow fools;</div>
- <div class='line'>Unprofitable sounds, weak arbitrators;</div>
- <div class='line'>Busy yourselves in skill-contending schools;</div>
- <div class='line'>Debate when leisure serves with dull debaters;</div>
- <div class='line'>To trembling clients be their mediators:</div>
- <div class='line'>For me I force not argument a straw,</div>
- <div class='line'>Since that my case is past all help of law.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The description of the horse in Venus and Adonis has been
-particularly admired, and not without reason:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Round hoof’d, short jointed, fetlocks shag and long,</div>
- <div class='line'>Broad breast, full eyes, small head, and nostril wide,</div>
- <div class='line'>High crest, short ears, strait legs, and passing strong,</div>
- <div class='line'>Thin mane, thick tail, broad buttock, tender hide,</div>
- <div class='line'>Look what a horse should have, he did not lack,</div>
- <div class='line'>Save a proud rider on so proud a back.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Now this inventory of perfections shews great knowledge of the
-horse; and is good matter-of-fact poetry. Let the reader but
-compare it with a speech in the <cite>Midsummer Night’s Dream</cite> where
-Theseus describes his hounds—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in14'>‘And their heads are hung</div>
- <div class='line'>With ears that sweep away the morning dew’—</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>and he will perceive at once what we mean by the difference between
-Shakespear’s own poetry, and that of his plays. We prefer the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_360'>360</span>Passionate Pilgrim very much to the Lover’s Complaint. It has
-been doubted whether the latter poem is Shakespear’s.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Of the Sonnets we do not well know what to say. The subject
-of them seems to be somewhat equivocal; but many of them are
-highly beautiful in themselves, and interesting as they relate to the
-state of the personal feelings of the author. The following are some
-of the most striking:—</p>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>CONSTANCY</h4>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Let those who are in favour with their stars,</div>
- <div class='line'>Of public honour and proud titles boast,</div>
- <div class='line'>Whilst I, whom fortune of such triumph bars,</div>
- <div class='line'>Unlook’d for joy in that I honour most.</div>
- <div class='line'>Great princes’ favourites their fair leaves spread,</div>
- <div class='line'>But as the marigold in the sun’s eye;</div>
- <div class='line'>And in themselves their pride lies buried,</div>
- <div class='line'>For at a frown they in their glory die.</div>
- <div class='line'>The painful warrior famous’d for fight,</div>
- <div class='line'>After a thousand victories once foil’d,</div>
- <div class='line'>Is from the book of honour razed quite,</div>
- <div class='line'>And all the rest forgot for which he toil’d:</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Then happy I, that love and am belov’d,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Where I may not remove, nor be remov’d.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>LOVE’S CONSOLATION</h4>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘When in disgrace with fortune and men’s eyes,</div>
- <div class='line'>I all alone beweep my out-cast state,</div>
- <div class='line'>And trouble deaf heaven with my bootless cries,</div>
- <div class='line'>And look upon myself, and curse my fate,</div>
- <div class='line'>Wishing me like to one more rich in hope,</div>
- <div class='line'>Featur’d like him, like him with friends possess’d,</div>
- <div class='line'>Desiring this man’s art, and that man’s scope,</div>
- <div class='line'>With what I most enjoy contented least:</div>
- <div class='line'>Yet in these thoughts myself almost despising,</div>
- <div class='line'>Haply I think on thee,—and then my state</div>
- <div class='line'>(Like to the lark at break of day arising</div>
- <div class='line'>From sullen earth) sings hymns at heaven’s gate;</div>
- <div class='line in2'>For thy sweet love remember’d, such wealth brings,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>That then I scorn to change my state with kings.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>NOVELTY</h4>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘My love is strengthen’d, though more weak in seeming</div>
- <div class='line'>I love not less, though less the show appear:</div>
- <div class='line'>That love is merchandis’d, whose rich esteeming</div>
- <div class='line'>The owner’s tongue doth publish everywhere.</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_361'>361</span>Our love was new, and then but in the spring,</div>
- <div class='line'>When I was wont to greet it with my lays:</div>
- <div class='line'>As Philomel in summer’s front doth sing,</div>
- <div class='line'>And stops his pipe in growth of riper days:</div>
- <div class='line'>Not that the summer is less pleasant now</div>
- <div class='line'>Than when her mournful hymns did hush the night,</div>
- <div class='line'>But that wild music burdens every bough,</div>
- <div class='line'>And sweets grown common lose their dear delight.</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Therefore, like her, I sometime hold my tongue,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Because I would not dull you with my song.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>LIFE’S DECAY</h4>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘That time of year thou may’st in me behold</div>
- <div class='line'>When yellow leaves, or none, or few do hang</div>
- <div class='line'>Upon those boughs which shake against the cold,</div>
- <div class='line'>Bare ruin’d choirs, where late the sweet birds sang.</div>
- <div class='line'>In me thou seest the twilight of such day,</div>
- <div class='line'>As after sun-set fadeth in the west,</div>
- <div class='line'>Which by and by black night doth take away,</div>
- <div class='line'>Death’s second self, that seals up all in rest.</div>
- <div class='line'>In me thou seest the glowing of such fire,</div>
- <div class='line'>That on the ashes of his youth doth lie,</div>
- <div class='line'>As the death-bed whereon it must expire,</div>
- <div class='line'>Consum’d with that which it was nourish’d by.</div>
- <div class='line in2'>This thou perceiv’st, which makes thy love more strong,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>To love that well which thou must leave ere long.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>In all these, as well as in many others, there is a mild tone of sentiment,
-deep, mellow, and sustained, very different from the crudeness
-of his earlier poems.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div>End of <span class='sc'>The Characters of Shakespear’s Plays</span>.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_363'>363</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>A LETTER TO WILLIAM GIFFORD, ESQ.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c023'><span class='pageno' id='Page_364'>364</span>[The title-page of the original edition is as follows: <cite>A Letter to
-William Gifford, Esq. From William Hazlitt, Esq. ‘<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Fit pugil, et
-medicum urget.</span>’ London: Printed for John Miller, Burlington Arcade,
-Piccadilly. 1819. Price Three Shillings.</cite> A so-called ‘second
-edition’ of 1820 consisted of the unsold copies with a fresh title-page:
-<em>London: Printed for Robert Stodart, 81 Strand. 1820.</em>]</p>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_365'>365</span></div>
-<div class='ph2'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c001'>
- <div>A LETTER TO WILLIAM GIFFORD, ESQ.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c009'>Sir,—You have an ugly trick of saying what is not true of any one
-you do not like; and it will be the object of this letter to cure you
-of it. You say what you please of others: it is time you were told
-what you are. In doing this, give me leave to borrow the familiarity
-of your style:—for the fidelity of the picture I shall be answerable.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>You are a little person, but a considerable cat’s-paw; and so far
-worthy of notice. Your clandestine connexion with persons high in
-office constantly influences your opinions, and alone gives importance
-to them. You are the <em>Government Critic</em>, a character nicely differing
-from that of a government spy—the invisible link, that connects
-literature with the police. It is your business to keep a strict eye
-over all writers who differ in opinion with his Majesty’s Ministers,
-and to measure their talents and attainments by the standard of their
-servility and meanness. For this office you are well qualified.
-Besides being the Editor of the Quarterly Review, you are also paymaster
-of the band of Gentlemen Pensioners; and when an author
-comes before you in the one capacity, with whom you are not acquainted
-in the other, you know how to deal with him. You have
-your cue beforehand. The distinction between truth and falsehood
-you make no account of: you mind only the distinction between
-Whig and Tory. Accustomed to the indulgence of your mercenary
-virulence and party-spite, you have lost all relish as well as capacity
-for the unperverted exercises of the understanding, and make up for
-the obvious want of ability by a bare-faced want of principle. The
-same set of thread-bare common-places, the same second-hand assortment
-of abusive nicknames, the same assumption of little magisterial
-airs of superiority, are regularly repeated; and the ready convenient
-lie comes in aid of the dearth of other resources, and passes off, with
-impunity, in the garb of religion and loyalty. If no one finds it out,
-why then there is no harm done, <em>snug’s the word</em>; or if it should be
-detected, it is a good joke, shews spirit and invention in proportion to
-its grossness and impudence, and it is only a pity that what was so
-well meant in so good a cause, should miscarry! The end sanctifies
-the means; and you keep no faith with heretics in religion or government.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_366'>366</span>You are under the protection of the <em>Court</em>; and your zeal for
-your king and country entitles you to say what you chuse of every
-public writer who does not do all in his power to pamper the one
-into a tyrant, and to trample the other into a herd of slaves. You
-derive your weight with the great and powerful from the very circumstance
-that takes away all real weight from your authority, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">viz.</span></i> that
-it is avowedly, and upon every occasion, exerted for no one purpose
-but to hold up to hatred and contempt whatever opposes in the slightest
-degree and in the most flagrant instances of abuse their pride and
-passions. You dictate your opinions to a party, because not one of
-your opinions is formed upon an honest conviction of the truth or
-justice of the case, but by collusion with the prejudices, caprice,
-interest or vanity of your employers. The mob of well-dressed
-readers who consult the Quarterly Review, know that <em>there is no offence
-in it</em>. They put faith in it because they are aware that it is ‘false and
-hollow, but will please the ear’; that it will tell them nothing but
-what they would wish to believe. Your reasoning comes under the
-head of Court-news; your taste is a standard of the prevailing <em>ton</em> in
-certain circles, like Ackerman’s dresses for May. When you damn
-an author, one knows that he is not a favourite at Carlton House.
-When you say that an author cannot write common sense or English,
-you mean that he does not believe in the doctrine of <em>divine right</em>.
-Of course, the clergy and gentry will not read such an author. Your
-praise or blame has nothing to do with the merits of a work, but with
-the party to which the writer belongs, or is in the inverse <em>ratio</em> of its
-merits. The dingy cover that wraps the pages of the Quarterly
-Review does not contain a concentrated essence of taste and knowledge,
-but is a receptacle for the scum and sediment of all the prejudice,
-bigotry, ill-will, ignorance, and rancour, afloat in the kingdom.
-This the fools and knaves who pin their faith on you know, and it is
-on this account they pin their faith on you. They come to you for a
-scale not of literary talent but of political subserviency. They want
-you to set your mark of approbation on a writer as a thorough-paced
-tool, or of reprobation as an honest man. Your fashionable readers,
-Sir, are hypocrites as well as knaves and fools; and the watch-word,
-the practical intelligence they want, must be conveyed to them without
-implied offence to their candour and liberality, in the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">patois</span></i> and
-gibberish of fraud of which you are a master. When you begin to
-jabber about common sense and English, they know what to be at,
-shut up the book, and wonder that any respectable publisher can be
-found to let it lie on his counter, as much as if it were a Petition for
-Reform. Do you suppose, Sir, that such persons as the Rev. Gerard
-Valerian Wellesley and the Rev. Weeden Butler would not be glad
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_367'>367</span>to ruin what they call a Jacobin author as well as a Jacobin stationer?<a id='r72' /><a href='#f72' class='c012'><sup>[72]</sup></a>
-Or that they will not thank you for persuading them that their doing
-so in the former case is a proof of their taste and good sense, as well
-as loyalty and religion? You know very well that if a particle of
-truth or fairness were to find its way into a single number of your
-publication, another Quarterly Review would be set up to-morrow for
-the express purpose of depriving every author, in prose or verse, of
-his reputation and livelihood, who is not a regular hack of the vilest
-cabal that ever disgraced this or any other country.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There is something in your nature and habits that fits you for the
-situation into which your good fortune has thrown you. In the first
-place, you are in no danger of exciting the jealousy of your patrons
-by a mortifying display of extraordinary talents, while your sordid
-devotion to their will and to your own interest at once ensures their
-gratitude and contempt. To crawl and lick the dust is all they
-expect of you, and all you can do. Otherwise they might fear your
-power, for they could have no dependence on your fidelity: but they
-take you with safety and fondness to their bosoms; for they know
-that if you cease to be a tool, you cease to be anything. If you had
-an exuberance of wit, the unguarded use of it might sometimes glance
-at your employers; if you were sincere yourself, you might respect
-the motives of others; if you had sufficient understanding, you might
-attempt an argument, and fail in it. But luckily for yourself and your
-admirers, you are but the dull echo, ‘the tenth transmitter’ of some
-hackneyed jest: the want of all manly and candid feeling in yourself
-only excites your suspicion and antipathy to it in others, as something
-at which your nature recoils: your slowness to understand makes you
-quick to misrepresent; and you infallibly make nonsense of what you
-cannot possibly conceive. What seem your wilful blunders are often
-the felicity of natural parts, and your want of penetration has all the
-appearance of an affected petulance!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Again, of an humble origin yourself, you recommend your performances
-to persons of fashion by always abusing <em>low people</em>, with the
-smartness of a lady’s waiting woman, and the independent spirit of a
-travelling tutor. Raised from the lowest rank to your present despicable
-eminence in the world of letters, you are indignant that any one
-should attempt to rise into notice, except by the same regular trammels
-and servile gradations, or should go about to separate the stamp of
-merit from the badge of sycophancy. The silent listener in select
-circles, and menial tool of noble families, you have become the oracle
-of Church and State. The purveyor to the prejudices or passions of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_368'>368</span>a private patron succeeds, by no other title, to regulate the public
-taste. You have felt the inconveniences of poverty, and look up with
-base and groveling admiration to the advantages of wealth and power:
-you have had to contend with the mechanical difficulties of a want of
-education, and you see nothing in learning but its mechanical uses.
-A self-taught man naturally becomes a pedant, and mistakes the means
-of knowledge for the end, unless he is a man of genius; and you, Sir,
-are not a man of genius. From having known nothing originally, you
-think it a great acquisition to know anything now, no matter what or
-how small it is—nay, the smaller and more insignificant it is, the more
-curious you seem to think it, as it is farther removed from common
-sense and human nature. The collating of points and commas is the
-highest game your literary ambition can reach to, and the squabbles of
-editors are to you infinitely more important than the meaning of an author.
-You think more of the letter than the spirit of a passage; and in your
-eagerness to show your minute superiority over those who have gone
-before you, generally miss both. In comparing yourself with others,
-you make a considerable mistake. You suppose the common advantages
-of a liberal education to be something peculiar to yourself, and
-calculate your progress beyond the rest of the world from the obscure
-point at which you first set out. Yet your overweening self-complacency
-is never easy but in the expression of your contempt for
-others; like a conceited mechanic in a village ale-house, you would
-set down every one who differs from you as an ignorant blockhead;
-and very fairly infer that any one who is beneath yourself must be
-nothing. You have been well called an Ultra-Crepidarian critic.
-From the difficulty you yourself have in constructing a sentence of
-common grammar, and your frequent failures, you instinctively presume
-that no author who comes under the lash of your pen can understand
-his mother-tongue: and again, you suspect every one who is not
-your ‘very good friend’ of knowing nothing of the Greek or Latin,
-because you are surprised to think how you came by your own knowledge
-of them. There is an innate littleness and vulgarity in all you
-do. In combating an opinion, you never take a broad and liberal
-ground, state it fairly, allow what there is of truth or an appearance
-of truth, and then assert your own judgment by exposing what is
-deficient in it, and giving a more masterly view of the subject. No:
-this would be committing your powers and pretensions where you dare
-not trust them. You know yourself better. You deny the meaning
-altogether, misquote or misapply, and then plume yourself on your
-own superiority to the absurdity you have created. Your triumph
-over your antagonists is the triumph of your cunning and mean-spiritedness
-over some nonentity of your own making; and your wary
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_369'>369</span>self-knowledge shrinks from a comparison with any but the most puny
-pretensions, as the spider retreats from the caterpillar into its web.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There cannot be a greater nuisance than a dull, envious, pragmatical,
-low-bred man, who is placed as you are in the situation of the Editor
-of such a work as the Quarterly Review. Conscious that his reputation
-stands on very slender and narrow grounds, he is naturally jealous
-of that of others. He insults over unsuccessful authors; he hates
-successful ones. He is angry at the faults of a work; more angry at
-its excellences. If an opinion is old, he treats it with supercilious
-indifference; if it is new, it provokes his rage. Everything beyond
-his limited range of inquiry, appears to him a paradox and an absurdity:
-and he resents every suggestion of the kind as an imposition on the
-public, and an imputation on his own sagacity. He cavils at what he
-does not comprehend, and misrepresents what he knows to be true.
-Bound to go through the nauseous task of abusing all those who are
-not like himself the abject tools of power, his irritation increases with
-the number of obstacles he encounters, and the number of sacrifices he
-is obliged to make of common sense and decency to his interest and
-self-conceit. Every instance of prevarication he wilfully commits
-makes him more in love with hypocrisy, and every indulgence of his
-hired malignity makes him more disposed to repeat the insult and the
-injury. His understanding becomes daily more distorted, and his
-feelings more and more callous. Grown old in the service of corruption,
-he drivels on to the last with prostituted impotence and shameless
-effrontery; salves a meagre reputation for wit, by venting the driblets
-of his spleen and impertinence on others; answers their arguments by
-confuting himself; mistakes habitual obtuseness of intellect for a
-particular acuteness, not to be imposed upon by shallow appearances;
-unprincipled rancour for zealous loyalty; and the irritable, discontented,
-vindictive, peevish effusions of bodily pain and mental imbecility
-for proofs of refinement of taste and strength of understanding.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Such, Sir, is the picture of which you have sat for the outline:—all
-that remains is to fill up the little, mean, crooked, dirty details.
-The task is to me no very pleasant one; for I can feel very little
-ambition to follow you through your ordinary routine of pettifogging
-objections and barefaced assertions, the only difficulty of making
-which is to throw aside all regard to truth and decency, and the only
-difficulty in answering them is to overcome one’s contempt for the
-writer. But you are a nuisance, and should be abated.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>I shall proceed to shew, first, your want of common honesty, in
-speaking of particular persons; and, secondly, your want of common
-capacity, in treating of any general question. It is this double negation
-of understanding and principle that makes you all that you are.—As
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_370'>370</span>an instance of the summary manner in which you dispose of any
-author who is not to your taste, you began your account of the first
-work of mine you thought proper to notice (the Round Table), with
-a paltry and deliberate falsehood. I need not be at much pains to
-shew that your opinion on the merits of a work is not of much value,
-after I have shewn that your word is not to be taken with respect
-to the author. The charges which you brought against me as the
-writer of that work, were chiefly these four:—1st, That I pretended
-to have written a work in the manner of the Spectator; I answer,
-this is a falsehood. The Advertisement to that work is written
-expressly to disclaim any such idea, and to apologise for the work’s
-having fallen short of the original intention of the projector (Mr.
-Leigh Hunt), from its execution having devolved almost entirely
-upon me, who had undertaken merely to furnish a set of essays and
-criticisms, which essays and criticisms were here collected together.—2.
-That I was not only a professed imitator of Addison, but a
-great coiner of new words and phrases: I answer, this is also a
-deliberate and contemptible falsehood. You have filled a paragraph
-with a catalogue of these new words and phrases, which you attribute
-to me, and single out as the particular characteristics of my style, not
-any one of which I have used. This you knew.—3. You say I
-write eternally about washerwomen. I answer, no such thing.
-There is indeed one paper in the Round Table on this subject, and
-I think a very agreeable one. I may say so, for it is not my
-writing.—4. You say that ‘I praise my own chivalrous eloquence’:
-and I answer, that’s a falsehood; and that you knew that I had not
-applied these words to myself, because you knew that it was not I
-who had used them. The last paragraph of the article in question
-is true: for as if to obviate the detection of this tissue of little, lying,
-loyal, catchpenny frauds, it contains a cunning, tacit acknowledgment
-of them; but says, with equal candour and modesty, that it is not the
-business of the writer to distinguish (in such trifling cases) between
-truth and falsehood. That may be; but I cannot think that for the
-editor of the Quarterly Review to want common veracity, is any disgrace
-to me. It is necessary, Sir, to go into the details of this
-fraudulent transaction, this Albemarle-street hoax, that the public
-may know, once for all, what to think of you and me. The first
-paragraph of the Review is couched in the following terms.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>‘Whatever may have been the preponderating feelings with which
-we closed these volumes, we will not refuse our acknowledgments to
-Mr. Hazlitt for a few mirthful sensations,’ (that they were very few,
-I can easily believe,) ‘which he has enabled us to mingle with the
-rest, by the hint that his Essays were meant to be “in the manner of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_371'>371</span>the Spectator and Tatler.” The passage in which this is conveyed,
-happened to be nearly the last to which we turned; and we were
-about to rise from the Round Table, heavily oppressed with a recollection
-of vulgar descriptions, silly paradoxes, flat truisms, misty sophistry,
-broken English, ill humour, and rancorous abuse, when we were first
-informed of the modest pretensions of our host. Our thoughts then
-reverted with an eager impulse to the urbanity of Addison, his unassuming
-tone, and clear simplicity; to the ease and softness of his
-style, to the chearful benevolence of his heart. The playful gaiety
-too, and the tender feelings of his coadjutor, poor Steele, came
-forcibly to our memory. The effect of the ludicrous contrast thus
-presented to us, it would be somewhat difficult to describe. We
-think that it was akin to what we have felt from the admirable <em>nonchalance</em>
-with which Liston, in the complex character of a weaver
-and an ass, seems to throw away all doubt of his being the most
-accomplished lover in the universe, and receives, as if they were
-merely his due, the caresses of the fairy queen.’—Quarterly Review,
-No. xxxiii. p. 154.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The advertisement prefixed to the Round Table, in which the hint
-is conveyed which afforded you ‘a few mirthful sensations,’ stood
-thus.—</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>‘The following work falls somewhat short of its title and original
-intention. It was proposed by my friend Mr. Hunt, to publish a
-series of papers in the Examiner, in the manner of the early periodical
-essayists, the Spectator and Tatler. These papers were to be contributed
-by various persons on a variety of subjects; and Mr. Hunt,
-as the editor, was to take the characteristic or dramatic part of the
-work upon himself. I undertook to furnish occasional essays and
-criticisms; one or two other friends promised their assistance; but
-the essence of the work was to be miscellaneous. The next thing
-was to fix upon a title for it. After much doubtful consultation, that
-of <span class='sc'>The Round Table</span> was agreed upon, as most descriptive of its
-nature and design. But our plan had been no sooner arranged and
-entered upon, than Buonaparte landed at Frejus, <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">et voila la Table
-Ronde dissoute</span></i>. Our little Congress was broken up as well as the
-great one. Politics called off the attention of the Editor from the
-belles lettres; and the task of continuing the work fell chiefly upon
-the person who was least able to give life and spirit to the original
-design. A want of variety in the subjects, and mode of treating
-them, is, perhaps, the least disadvantage resulting from this circumstance.
-All the papers in the two volumes here offered to the public,
-were written by myself and Mr. Hunt, except a letter communicated
-by a friend in the sixteenth number. Out of the fifty-two numbers,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_372'>372</span>twelve are Mr. Hunt’s, with the signatures L. H. or H. T. For
-all the rest I am answerable. <span class='sc'>W. Hazlitt.</span>’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Such, Sir, is the passage to which you allude, with so much
-hysterical satisfaction, as having let you into the secret that I fancied
-myself to have produced a work ‘in the manner of the Spectator and
-Tatler’; and as having relieved you from the extreme uneasiness you
-had felt in reading through the ‘vulgar descriptions, silly paradoxes,
-flat truisms, misty sophistry, broken English, ill humour, and rancorous
-abuse,’ contained in the Round Table. If I had indeed given
-myself out for a second Steele or Addison, I should have made a
-very ludicrous mistake. As it is, it is you have made a wilful misstatement.
-Your oppression, Sir, in rising from the Round Table,
-must have been great to put you upon so desperate an expedient to
-divert your chagrin, as that of affecting to suppose that I had said
-just the contrary of what I did say, in order that you might affect ‘a
-few mirthful sensations’ at my expence. I cannot say that I envy
-you the little voluntary revulsion which your feelings underwent, at
-the ludicrous comparison which you fancy me to make between myself
-and Addison, on purpose to indulge the suggestions of your spleen
-and prejudice. These are among the last refinements, the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">menus
-plaisirs</span></i> of hypocrisy, of which I must remain in ignorance. I will
-not require you to retract the assertion you have made, but I will take
-care before I have done, that any assertion you may make with
-respect to me shall not be taken as current. As to your praise of the
-Tatler and Spectator, I must at all times agree to it: but as far as it
-was meant as a tacit reproof to my vanity in comparing myself with
-these authors, it appears to have been unnecessary. You say elsewhere,
-speaking of some passage of mine—‘Addison never wrote
-anything so fine!’—and again that I fancy myself a finer writer than
-Addison. By your uneasy jealousy of the self-conceit of other
-people, it should seem that you are in the habit of drawing comparisons,
-‘secret, sweet, and precious,’ between yourself and your
-‘illustrious predecessors’ not much to their advantage. As you have
-here thought proper to tell me what I do not think, I will tell you
-what I do think, which is, that you could not have written the
-passage in question, <cite>On the Progress of Arts</cite>, because you never felt
-half the enthusiasm for what is fine.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>2. After stating the pretensions of the work, you proceed to the
-style in which it is written.—‘There is one merit which this author
-possesses besides that of successful imitation—he is a very eminent
-creator of words and phrases. Amongst a vast variety which have
-newly started up we notice “firesider”—“kitcheny”—“to smooth
-up”—“to do off”—and “to tiptoe down.” To <em>this</em> we add a few
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_373'>373</span>of the author’s new-born phrases, which bear sufficient marks of a
-kindred origin to entitle them to a place by <em>their</em> side. Such is the
-assertion that Spenser “was dipt in poetic luxury”; the description
-of “a minute coil which clicks in the baking coal”—of “a numerousness
-scattering an individual gusto”—and of “curls that are ripe
-with sun shine.” <em>Our readers are perhaps by this time as much
-acquainted with the style of this author as they have any desire to be</em>,’ etc.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>I have nothing to do at present with the merits of the words or
-phrases, which you here attribute to me, and make the test of my
-general style, as if your readers truly if they persisted would find only
-a constant repetition of them in my writings. I say that they are
-not mine at all; that they are not characteristic of my style, that you
-knew this perfectly, and also that there were reasons which prevented
-me from pointing out this petty piece of chicanery; and farther, I
-say that I am so far from being ‘a very eminent creator of words
-and phrases,’ that I do not believe you can refer to an instance in
-anything I have written in which there is a single new word or
-phrase. In fact, I am as tenacious on this score of never employing
-any new words to express my ideas, as you, Sir, are of never
-expressing any ideas that are not perfectly thread-bare and commonplace.
-My style is as old as your matter. This is the fault you at
-other times find with it, mistaking the common idiom of the language
-for ‘broken English.’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>3. You say that ‘I write eternally about washerwomen’; and
-pray, if I did, what is that to you, Sir? There is a littleness in your
-objections which makes even the answers to them ridiculous, and
-which would make it impossible to notice them, were you not the
-Government-Critic. You say yourself indeed afterwards that ‘It is
-he’ (Mr. Hunt) ‘who devotes <em>ten or twelve pages</em> to a dissertation
-on washerwomen.’ Good: what you say on this subject is a fair
-specimen of your mind and manners. The playing at fast-and-loose
-with the matter-of-fact may be passed over as a matter of course in
-your hypercritical lucubrations. There is but one half paper on this
-interdicted subject in the Round Table:—you have filled one page out
-of five of the article in the Review with a ridicule of this paper on
-account of the vulgarity of the subject, which offends you exceedingly;
-you recur to it twice afterwards <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">en passant</span></i>, and end your
-performance (somewhat in the style of a quack-doctor aping his own
-merry-andrew) with ‘two or three conclusive digs in the side at it.’
-There is something in the subject that makes a strong impression
-on your mind. You seem ‘to hate it with a perfect hatred.’<a id='r73' /><a href='#f73' class='c012'><sup>[73]</sup></a>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_374'>374</span>Now I would ask where is the harm of this dissertation on
-washerwomen inserted in the Round Table, any more than those
-of Dutch and Flemish kitchen-pieces, the glossy brilliancy and
-high finishing of which must have become familiar to your eye
-in the collections of Earl Grosvenor, Lord Mulgrave, and the
-Marquis of Stafford? What has Mr. Hunt done in this never-to-be
-forgiven paper to betray the lowness of his breeding or sentiments,
-or to shew that he who wrote it is ‘the droll or merry fellow of the
-piece,’ and that I who <em>did not write it</em> am ‘a sour Jacobin, who hate
-everything but washerwomen’? Would Addison or Steele, ‘poor
-Steele’ as you call him, have brought this as a capital charge against
-their ‘imitators’? Did they instinctively direct their speculations or
-limit their views of human life to ‘remarks on gentlemen and gentlewomen’?
-They often enough treated of low people and familiar life
-without any consciousness of degradation. ‘Their gorge did not
-rise’ at the humble worth or homely enjoyments of their fellow-creatures,
-like your’s. A coronet or a mitre were not the only things
-that caught their jaundiced eye, or soothed their rising gall. They
-who are always talking of high and low people are generally of a
-vulgar origin themselves, and of an inherent meanness of disposition
-which nothing can overcome. Besides, there is a want of good
-faith, as well as of good taste, in your affected fastidiousness on this
-point. ‘You assume a vice, though you have it not,’ or not to the
-degree, which your petulance and servility would have us suppose. A
-short time before you wrote this uncalled-for tirade against Mr. Hunt
-as an exclusive patroniser of that class of females, ycleped ‘washerwomen,’
-he had quoted with praise in the Examiner, and as a mark
-of tender and humane feelings in the author, in spite of appearances
-to the contrary, the following epitaph from the Gentleman’s Magazine.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>‘<span class='sc'>Epitaph by William Gifford, Esq.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>‘We are no friends, publicly speaking, to the author of the following
-epitaph. We differ much with his politics, and with the cast of his
-satire; and do not think him, properly speaking, a poet, as many do.
-But we always admired the spirit that looked forth from his account
-of his own life, and the touching copy of verses on a departed friend,
-that are to be found in the notes to one of his satires; and there are
-feelings and circumstances in this world, before which politics and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_375'>375</span>satire, and poetry, are of little importance’—(<em>How little knew’st thou
-of Calista!</em>)—‘feelings, that triumph over infirmity and distaste of
-every sort, and only render us anxious, in our respect for them, to be
-thought capable of appreciating them ourselves. The world, with all
-its hubbub, slides away from before one on such occasions; and we only
-see humanity in all its better weakness, and let us add, in all its beauty.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>‘The author will think what he pleases of this effusion of ours.
-It is an interval in the battle, during which we only wish to show
-ourselves fellow-men with him. Afterwards, he may resume his
-hostilities, if he has any, and we will draw our swords as before.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c013'>
- <div><em>For the ‘Gentleman’s Magazine.’ Dec. 18, 1815.</em></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>‘Mr. Urban,—I am one of those who love to contemplate the
-“frail memorials” of the dead, and do not, therefore, count the
-solitary hours, occasionally spent in a church-yard, among the most
-melancholy ones of my life. But in London, this is a gratification
-rarely to be found; for, either through caution, or some less worthy
-motive, the cemeteries are closed against the stranger. I have been
-in the practice of passing by the chapel in South Audley Street,
-Grosvenor Square, almost every day, for several weeks, yet never saw
-the door of the burying-ground open till yesterday. I did not neglect
-the opportunity thus offered, but walked in. I found it far more
-spacious and airy than I expected; but I met with nothing very
-novel or interesting till I came to a low tomb, plain but neat, where
-I was both pleased and surprised by the following inscription, which, I
-believe, has never yet appeared in print, and which seems not unworthy
-of your miscellany.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>M. D.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c013'>
- <div>Here lies the Body</div>
- <div>of ANN DAVIES,</div>
- <div>(for more than twenty years)</div>
- <div>Servant to William Gifford.<a id='r74' /><a href='#f74' class='c012'><sup>[74]</sup></a></div>
- <div>She died February 6, 1815,</div>
- <div>in the forty-third year of her age,</div>
- <div>of a tedious and painful malady,</div>
- <div>which she bore</div>
- <div>with exemplary patience and resignation.</div>
- <div class='c004'>Her deeply-afflicted master</div>
- <div>erected this stone to her memory,</div>
- <div>as a faithful testimony</div>
- <div>of her uncommon worth,</div>
- <div>and of his perpetual gratitude,</div>
- <div>respect and affection,</div>
- <div>for her long and meritorious services.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_376'>376</span>Though here unknown, dear Ann, thy ashes rest,</div>
- <div class='line'>Still lives thy memory in one grateful breast,</div>
- <div class='line'>That traced thy course through many a painful year,</div>
- <div class='line'>And marked thy humble hope, thy pious fear.—</div>
- <div class='line'>O! when this frame, which yet, while life remained,</div>
- <div class='line'>Thy duteous love, with trembling hand, sustained,</div>
- <div class='line'>Dissolves (as soon it must) may that Bless’d Pow’r</div>
- <div class='line'>Who beamed on thine, illume my parting hour!</div>
- <div class='line'>So shall I greet thee, where no ills annoy,</div>
- <div class='line'>And what was sown in grief, is reap’d in joy;</div>
- <div class='line'>Where worth, obscured below, bursts into day,</div>
- <div class='line'>And those are paid, whom Earth could never pay.’<a id='r75' /><a href='#f75' class='c012'><sup>[75]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>It seems then, you can extract the pathetic though not the
-humorous, out of persons who are not ‘gentlemen or gentlewomen.’
-It was the amiable weakness thus noticed, that made you take such
-pains to do away the suspicion of a particular partiality for low
-people. You could not afford ‘the frail memorial’ of your private
-virtues to get beyond the inscription on a tomb-stone, or the poet’s
-corner of the Gentleman’s Magazine. The natural sympathies of the
-undoubted translator of Juvenal might be a prejudice to the official
-character of the anonymous editor of the Quarterly Review. You
-were determined to hear no more of this epitaph, and ‘other such
-dulcet diseases’<a id='r76' /><a href='#f76' class='c012'><sup>[76]</sup></a> of yours.—You perhaps recollect, Sir, that the
-columns of the Examiner newspaper, which gave you such a premature
-or posthumous credit for some ‘compunctious visitings of nature,’ also
-contained the first specimen of the Story of Rimini. You seem to
-have said on that occasion with Iago, ‘You are well tuned now,—but
-I’ll set down the pegs that make this music, <em>as honest as I am</em>.’—That
-Mr. Hunt should have supposed it possible for a moment,
-that a government automaton was accessible to anything like a liberal
-concession, is one of those deplorable mistakes which constantly put
-men who are ‘made of penetrable stuff,’ at the mercy of those who
-are not. The amiable and elegant author of Rimini thought he was
-appealing to something human in your breast, in the recollection of
-your ‘Dear Ann Davies’; he touched the springs, and found them
-‘stuffed with paltry blurred sheets’ of the Quarterly Review, with
-notes from Mr. Murray, and directions how to proceed with the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_377'>377</span>author, from the Admiralty Scribe. You retorted his sympathy with
-‘one whom earth could never pay,’ by laughing to scorn his honest
-laborious ‘tub-tumbling viragos,’ whose red elbows and coarse fists
-prevented so inelegant a contrast to the pining and sickly form whose
-loss you deplore. Is there anything in your nature and disposition
-that draws to it only the infirm in body and oppressed in mind; or
-that, while it clings to power for support, seeks consolation in the
-daily soothing spectacle of physical malady or morbid sensibility?
-The air you breathe seems to infect; and your friendship to be a
-canker-worm that blights its objects with unwholesome and premature
-decay. You are enamoured of suffering, and are at peace only with
-the dead.—Even if you had been accessible to remorse as a political
-critic, Mr. Hunt had committed himself with you (past forgiveness)
-in your character of a pretender to poetry about town. The following
-lines in his Feast of the Poets, must have occasioned you ‘a few
-mirthful sensations,’ which you have not yet acknowledged, except
-by deeds.—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘A hem was then heard, consequential and snapping,</div>
- <div class='line'>And a sour little gentleman walked with a rap in.</div>
- <div class='line'>He bow’d, look’d about him, seem’d cold, and sat down,</div>
- <div class='line'>And said,<a id='r77' /><a href='#f77' class='c012'><sup>[77]</sup></a> “I’m surpris’d that you’ll visit this town:—</div>
- <div class='line'>To be sure, there are one or two of us who know you,</div>
- <div class='line'>But as for the rest, they are all much below you.</div>
- <div class='line'>So stupid, in general, the natives are grown,</div>
- <div class='line'>They really prefer Scotch reviews to their own;</div>
- <div class='line'>So that what with their taste, their reformers, and stuff,</div>
- <div class='line'>They have sicken’d myself and my friends long enough.”</div>
- <div class='line'>“Yourself and your friends!” cried the God in high glee;</div>
- <div class='line'>“And pray my frank visitor, who may you be?”</div>
- <div class='line'>“Who be?” cried the other; “why really—this tone—</div>
- <div class='line'>William Gifford’s a name, I think pretty well known.”</div>
- <div class='line'>“Oh—now I remember,” said Phœbus;—“ah true—</div>
- <div class='line'>My thanks to that name are undoubtedly due:</div>
- <div class='line'>The rod, that got rid of the Cruscas and Lauras,</div>
- <div class='line'>—That plague of the butterflies—sav’d me the horrors;</div>
- <div class='line'>The Juvenal too stops a gap in one’s shelf,</div>
- <div class='line'>At least in what Dryden has not done himself;</div>
- <div class='line'>And there’s something, which even distaste must respect,</div>
- <div class='line'>In the self-taught example, that conquer’d neglect.</div>
- <div class='line'>But not to insist on the recommendations</div>
- <div class='line'>Of modesty, wit, and a small stock of patience,</div>
- <div class='line'>My visit just now is to poets alone,</div>
- <div class='line'>And not to small critics, however well known.”</div>
- <div class='line'>So saying, he rang, to leave nothing in doubt,</div>
- <div class='line'>And the sour little gentleman bless’d himself out.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_378'>378</span><em>Thus painters write their names at Co.</em> For this passage and the
-temperate and judicious note which accompanies it, it is no wonder
-that you put the author—of Rimini, in Newgate, without the Sheriff’s
-warrant. In order to give as favourable an impression of that poem
-as you could, you began your account of it by saying that it had been
-composed in Newgate, though you knew that it had not; but you
-also knew that the name of Newgate would sound more grateful to
-certain ears, to pour flattering poison into which is the height of your
-abject ambition. In this courtly inuendo which ushered in your
-wretched verbal criticism (it is the more disgusting to see such gross
-and impudent prevarication combined with such petty captiousness)
-you were guided not by a regard to truth, but to your own ends; and
-yet you say somewhere, very oracularly, out of contradiction to me, that
-‘not to prefer the true to the agreeable, where they are inconsistent,
-is folly.’ You have mistaken the word: it is not folly, but knavery.<a id='r78' /><a href='#f78' class='c012'><sup>[78]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>4. You say you have no objection to my ‘praising my own
-chivalrous eloquence’; and I say that the insinuation is impertinent
-and untrue. The paper in which that phrase occurs is written by
-Mr. Hunt, as you know, and is an answer to some observations of
-mine on the poetical temperament in a preceding number <cite>On the
-Causes of Methodism</cite>. Mr. Hunt’s having taken upon him ‘to praise
-my chivalrous eloquence,’ without consulting you, appeared no doubt
-a great piece of presumption; and you punished me by magnifying
-this indiscretion into the enormity of my having praised myself. I
-might as well say that Mr. Canning had made a fulsome eulogy on
-his own private virtues and public principles in your dedication of the
-edition of Ben Jonson to him.—You say indeed in the last paragraph
-of your criticism that ‘you understand some of the papers to be by
-Mr. Hunt; that it is he who is the droll or merry fellow of the
-piece; who has shocked you by writing eternally about washerwomen,
-etc. but that you cannot stay to distinguish between us, and
-that we must divide our respective share of merit between ourselves.’
-The share of merit in that work may indeed be so small that it is of
-little consequence who has the reversion of any part of it, but I will
-take care that a cat’s-paw shall not be put on the pannel of my
-<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">quantum meruit</span></i>, nor take measure of my capacity with a mechanic
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_379'>379</span>rule, marked by ignorance and servility, nor turn the scale of public
-opinion by throwing in false weights as he pleases, nor make both of
-us ridiculous, by attributing to each the peculiarities of the other,
-with whatever exaggerated interpretation he chuses to put upon them.
-By this transposition of persons, which is not a matter of indifference
-as you pretend, you gain this advantage which you have no right to
-gain. You can at any time apply to me or Mr. Hunt the obnoxious
-points in your account of either, and improve upon them, as it suits
-your purpose. By combining the extremes of individual character,
-you make a very strange and wilful compound of your own. It is
-the same person, and yet it is not one person but two persons,
-according to the critical creed you would establish, who is a merry
-fellow, and a sour Jacobin; who is all gaiety and all gloom; a
-person who rails at poets, and yet is himself a poet; a hater of cats,
-and of cat’s-paws;<a id='r79' /><a href='#f79' class='c012'><sup>[79]</sup></a> a reviler of Mr. Pitt, and a panegyrist upon
-washerwomen. If, Sir, your friend, Mr. Hoppner, of whom, as
-you tell us<a id='r80' /><a href='#f80' class='c012'><sup>[80]</sup></a> you discreetly said nothing, while he was struggling
-with obscurity, lest it should be imputed to the partiality of
-friendship, but whom you praised and dedicated to, as soon as
-he became popular, to shew your disinterestedness and deference to
-public opinion, if even this artist, whom you celebrate as a painter of
-flattering likenesses, had undertaken to unite in one piece the most
-striking features and characteristic expression of his and your common
-friends, had improved your lurking archness of look into Mr.
-Murray’s gentle, downcast obliquity of vision; had joined Mr.
-Canning’s drooping nose to Mr. Croker’s aspiring chin, the clear
-complexion (the <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">splendida bilis</span></i>) of the one, to the candid self-complacent
-aspect of the other; had forced into the same preposterous
-medley, the invincible <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">hauteur</span></i> and satanic pride of Mr. Pitt’s
-physiognomy, with the dormant meaning and admirable nonchalance
-of Lord Castlereagh’s features, the manly sleekness of Charles Long,
-and the monumental outline of John Kemble—what mortal would
-have owned the likeness!—I too, Sir, must claim the privilege of
-the <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">principium individuationis</span></i>, for myself as well as my neighbours; I
-will sit for no man’s picture but my own, and not to you for that;
-I am not desirous to play so many parts as Bottom, and as to his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_380'>380</span>ass’s head which you would put upon my shoulders, it will do for
-you to wear the next time you shew yourself in Mr. Murray’s shop,
-or for your friend Mr. Southey to take with him, whenever he
-appears at Court.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As to the difference of political sentiment between the writer of
-the Round Table and the writer of the article in the Review, which
-forms the heavy burthen of your flippant censure, I cannot consider
-that as an accusation. You have many other objections to make:
-such as that, because Mr. Addison wrote some very pleasing papers
-on the Pleasures of the Imagination, I am not willing to fall short of
-‘my illustrious predecessor’; and ‘accordingly,’ you say, ‘we hear
-much of poetry and of painting, and of music and of <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">gusto</span></i>.’ Is this
-the only reason you can conceive why any one should take an interest
-in such things; or did you write your Baviad and Mæviad that you
-might not fall short of Pope, your translation of Juvenal that you
-might surpass Dryden, or did you turn commentator on the poets,
-that you might be on a par with ‘your illustrious predecessors’—‘from
-slashing Bentley down to piddling Theobalds’? Of Hogarth
-you make me say, quoting from your favourite treatise on washerwomen,
-that ‘he is too apt to perk morals and sentiments in your
-face.’ You cannot comprehend my definition of <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">gusto</span></i>, which you do
-not ascribe to any defect in yourself. My account of Titian and
-Vandyke’s colouring, appears to you very odd, because it is like
-the things described, and you have no idea of the things described.
-If I had described the style of these two painters in terms applicable
-to them both, and to all other painters, you would have thought the
-precision of the style equal to the justness of the sentiment. A
-distinction without a difference satisfies you, for you can understand
-or repeat a common-place. It is the pointing out the real differences
-of things that offends you, for you have no idea of what is meant;
-and a writer who gets at all below the surface of a question,
-necessarily gets beyond your depth, and you can hardly contain
-your wonder at his presumption and shallowness. You quote half
-a dozen detached sentences of mine, as ‘convincing instances of
-affectation and paradox,’ (such as, <em>The definition of a true patriot is a
-good hater—He who speaks two languages has no country</em>, etc.) and
-which taken from the context to which they belong, and of which
-they are brought as extreme illustrations, may be so, but which you
-cannot answer in the connection in which they stand, and which you
-detach from the general speculation with which you dare not cope, to
-bring them more into the focus of your microscopic vision, and that
-you may deal with them more at ease and in safety on your old
-ground of literal and verbal quibbling.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_381'>381</span>You do not like the subjects of my Essays in general. You
-complain in particular of ‘my eager vituperation of good nature and
-good-natured people’; and yet with this you have, as I should take
-it, nought to do: you object to my sweeping abuse of poets, as (with
-the exception of Milton) dishonest men,<a id='r81' /><a href='#f81' class='c012'><sup>[81]</sup></a> with which you have as
-little to do; you are no poet, and of course, honest! You do not
-like my abuse of the Scotch at which the Irish were delighted, nor
-my abuse of the Irish at which the Scotch were not displeased,
-nor my abuse of the English, which I can understand; but I wonder
-you should not like my abuse of the French. You say indeed that
-‘no abuse which is directed against whole classes of men is of much
-importance,’ and yet you and your Anti-Jacobin friends have been
-living upon this sort of abuse for the last twenty years. You add
-with characteristic ‘no meaning’—‘<em>If undeserved</em>, it is utterly impotent
-and may be well utterly despised.’ The last part of the
-proposition may be true, but abuse is not without effect, because
-undeserved, nor is a thing utterly impotent because it is thoroughly
-despicable. You, Sir, have power which is considerable, in proportion
-as it is despicable!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>I confess, Sir, the Round Table did not take; ‘it was <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Caveare</span></i> to
-the multitude,’ but the reason, I think, was not that the abuse in it
-was undeserved, but that I have there spoken the truth of too many
-persons and things. In writing it, I preferred the true to the
-agreeable, which I find to be an unpardonable fault. Yet I am
-not aware of any sentiment in the work which ought to give offence
-to an honest and inquiring mind, for I think there is none that does
-not evidently proceed from a conviction of its truth and a bias to
-what is right. My object in writing it was to set down such
-observations as had occurred to me from time to time on different
-subjects, and as appeared to be any ways worth preserving. I
-wished to make a sort of <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Liber Veritatis</span></i>, a set of studies from
-human life. As my object was not to flatter, neither was it to
-offend or contradict others, but to state my own feelings or opinions
-such as they really were, but more particularly of course when this
-had not been done before, and where I thought I could throw any
-new light upon a subject. In doing so, I endeavoured to fix my
-attention only on the thing I was writing about, and which had
-struck me in some particular manner, which I wished to point out
-to others, with the best reasons or explanations I could give. I was
-not the slave of prejudices; nor do I think I was the dupe of
-my own vanity. To repeat what has been said a thousand times is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_382'>382</span>common-place: to contradict it because it has been so said, is not
-originality. A truth is, however, not the worse but the better for
-being new. I did not try to think with the multitude nor to differ
-with them, but to think for myself; and the having done this with
-some boldness and some effect is the height of my offending. I
-wrote to the public with the same sincerity and want of disguise as
-if I had been making a register of my private thoughts; and
-this has been construed by some into a breach of decorum. The
-affectation I have been accused of was merely my sometimes stating
-a thing in an extreme point of view for fear of not being understood;
-and my love of paradox may, I think, be accounted for from the
-necessity of counteracting the obstinacy of prejudice. If I have been
-led to carry a remark too far, it was because others would not allow
-it to have any force at all. My object was to shew the latent operation
-of some unsuspected principle, and I therefore took only some
-one view of that particular subject. I was chiefly anxious that the
-germ of thought should be true and original; that I should put others
-in possession of what I meant, and then left it to find its level in the
-operation of common sense, and to have its excesses corrected by
-other causes. The principle will be found true, even where the
-application is extravagant or partial. I have not been wedded to my
-particular speculations with the spirit of a partisan. I wrote for
-instance an Essay on Pedantry, to qualify the extreme contempt into
-which it has fallen, and to shew the necessary advantages of an
-absorption of the whole mind in some favourite study, and I wrote
-an Essay on the Ignorance of the Learned to lessen the undue
-admiration of Learning, and to shew that it is not everything. I
-gained very few converts to either of these opinions. You reproach
-me with the cynical turn of many of my Essays, which are in fact
-prose-satires; but when you say I hate every thing but washerwomen,
-you forget what you had before said that I was a great
-imitator of Addison, and wrote much about ‘poetry and painting,
-and music and <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">gusto</span></i>.’ You make no mention of my character of
-Rousseau, or of the paper on Actors and Acting. You also forget
-my praise of John Buncle! As to my style, I thought little about
-it. I only used the word which seemed to me to signify the idea I
-wanted to convey, and I did not rest till I had got it. In seeking
-for truth, I sometimes found beauty. As to the facility of which
-you, Sir, and others accuse me, it has not been acquired at once nor
-without pains. I was eight years in writing eight pages, under
-circumstances of inconceivable and ridiculous discouragement. As
-to my figurative and gaudy phraseology, you reproach me with it
-because you never heard of what I had written in my first dry
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_383'>383</span>manner. I afterwards found a popular mode of writing necessary to
-convey subtle and difficult trains of reasoning, and something more
-than your meagre vapid style, to force attention to original observations,
-which did not restrict themselves to making a parade of the
-discovery of a worm-eaten date, or the repetition of an obsolete prejudice.
-You say that it is impossible to remember what I write after
-reading it:—One remembers to have read what you write—<em>before</em>!
-In that you have the advantage of me, to be sure. You in vain
-endeavour to account for the popularity of some of my writings,
-from the trick of arranging words in a variety of forms without any
-correspondent ideas, like the newly-invented optical toy. You have
-not hit upon the secret, nor will you be able to avail yourself of it
-when I tell you. It is the old story—<em>that I think what I please,
-and say what I think</em>. This accounts, Sir, for the difference between
-you and me in so many respects. I think only of the argument I
-am defending; you are only thinking whether you write grammar.
-My opinions are founded on reasons which I try to give; yours are
-governed by motives which you keep to yourself. It has been my
-business all my life to get at the truth as well as I could, merely to
-satisfy my own mind: it has been yours to suppress the evidence of
-your senses and the dictates of your understanding, if you ever found
-them at variance with your convenience or the caprices of others. I
-do not suppose you ever in your life took an interest in any abstract
-question for its own sake, or have a conception of the possibility of
-any one else doing so. If you had, you would hardly insist on my
-changing characters with you. Yet you make this the condition of
-my receiving any favour or lenity at your hands. It is no matter,
-Sir: I will try to do without it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It appears by your own account, that all the other offences of the
-Round Table would hardly have roused your resentment, had it not
-been that I have spoken of Mr. Pitt and Mr. Burke, not in the
-hackneyed terms of a treasury underling. It was this that filled up
-the measure of my iniquity, and the storm burst on my devoted head.
-After quoting one or two half sentences from the character of Mr.
-Pitt,<a id='r82' /><a href='#f82' class='c012'><sup>[82]</sup></a> in which I ascribe the influence of his oratory almost entirely
-to a felicitous and imposing arrangement of words, and the whole of a
-short note on Mr. Burke’s political apostacy, which I had fancifully
-ascribed to his jealousy of Rousseau, you add with great sincerity:—‘We
-are far from intending to write a single word in answer to this
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_384'>384</span>loathsome trash’—(it would have been well if you had made and
-kept the same resolution in other cases,) ‘but we confess that these
-passages chiefly excited us to take the trouble of noticing the work.
-The author might have described washerwomen for ever; complimented
-himself unceasingly on his own “chivalrous eloquence”;
-prosed interminably about Chaucer; written, if possible, in a more
-affected, silly, confused, ungrammatical style, and believed, as he
-now believes, that he was surpassing Addison, we should not have
-meddled with him; but if the creature, in his endeavours to crawl
-into the light, must take his way over the tombs of illustrious men,
-disfiguring the records of their greatness with the slime and filth
-which marks his track, it is right to point him out that he may be
-flung back to the situation in which nature designed that he should
-grovel’ p. 159. And this, Sir, from you who wrote or procured
-to be inserted in the Quarterly Review, that nefarious attack on the
-character of Mr. Fox, which was distinguished and is still remembered
-among the slime and filth which has marked its track into day,
-over the characters and feelings of the living and the dead. If I,
-Sir, had written that ‘foul and vulgar invective’ against an individual
-whom you did not choose to let ‘rest in his grave,’ if I had been
-‘such a thing’ as the writer of that article, I might, (as you say,)
-have described washerwomen for ever, and have fancied myself a
-better writer than ‘the courtly Addison,’ and you, Sir, would have
-encouraged me in the delusion, for I should have been a court-tool,
-<em>your</em> tool. But you state the thing clearly and unanswerably. I
-was not a court-tool, your tool, and therefore I was to be made your
-victim. There is a difference of political opinion between you and
-me; therefore you undertake not only to condemn that opinion, but
-to proscribe the writer. Do you do this on your own authority, or
-on Mr. Croker’s, or on whose? As I did not consider it as sacrilege
-to criticise the style and the opinions of the two great men who have
-contributed to make this country what it is, a fief held by a junto, of
-which men like you are the organs, in trust and for the benefit of the
-common cause of despotism throughout Europe, I, and every other
-writer like me, professing or maintaining anything like independence
-of spirit or consistency of opinion, is ‘to be flung back into his
-original obscurity, and stifled in the filth and slime’ of the Quarterly
-Review, or its drain, Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine. You began
-the experiment upon the Round Table; you have tried it twice since,
-and for the last time.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>If any doubts could ever have been entertained on the subject of
-your motives and views, you have taken care to remove them. Thus
-you conclude your account of the characters of Shakespear’s plays
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_385'>385</span>with saying, that you should not have condescended to notice the
-senseless and wicked sophistry of the work at all, but that ‘you conceived
-it might not be unprofitable to shew how small a portion of
-talent and literature is necessary to carry on the trade of sedition.’
-I should think it requires as much talent and literature to carry on
-my trade as yours. This acknowledgment of yours is ‘remarkable
-for its truth and <em>naiveté</em>.’ It is a pledge from your own mouth of
-your impartiality and candour. With this object in view, ‘you have
-selected a few specimens of my ethics and criticism,’ (they are very
-few, and of course you would select no others,) just sufficient, (with
-your garbling and additions,) to prove ‘that my knowledge of Shakespear
-and the English language is exactly on a par with the purity of
-my morals, and the depth of my understanding.’ But did it not
-occur to you in making this officious declaration, or would it not
-occur to any one else in reading it, that this undertaking of yours
-might be no less ‘profitable’ and acceptable, even supposing the
-portion of talent displayed by the author not to be small but great?
-Would it not be more necessary in this case to do away the scandal
-that there was any talent or literature on the side of ‘sedition’?
-The greater the shock given to the complacency of servility and
-corruption, by an opinion getting abroad that there was any knowledge
-of Shakespear or the English language except on the minister’s
-side of the question, would it not be the more absolutely incumbent
-on you as the head of the literary police, to arrest such an opinion in
-the outset, to crush it before it gathered strength, and to produce the
-article in question as your warrant? Why, what a disgrace to literature
-and to loyalty, if owing to the neglect and supineness of the
-editor of the Quarterly Review, a work written without an atom of
-cant or hypocrisy, and of course with a very small portion of talent
-and literature, should, in the space of three months get into a second
-edition, and be fast advancing to a third, be noticed in the Edinburgh
-Review, and be talked of by persons who never looked into the
-Examiner; and how necessary without loss of time, to counteract the
-mischievous inference from all this, restore the taste of the public to
-its legitimate tone, and satisfy the courteous reader, who ‘was well
-affected to the constitution in church and state as now established,’
-that in future he must look for a knowledge of Shakespear only in
-the editor of Ben Jonson, of the English language in the private tutor
-of Lord Grosvenor, for purity of morals in the translator of Juvenal,
-and for depth of understanding in the notes to the Baviad and
-Mæviad! Your employers, Mr. Gifford, do not pay their hirelings
-for nothing—for condescending to notice weak and wicked sophistry;
-for pointing out to contempt what excites no admiration; for cautiously
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_386'>386</span>selecting a few specimens of bad taste and bad grammar, where
-nothing else is to be found. They want your invincible pertness,
-your mercenary malice, your impenetrable dulness, your barefaced
-impudence, your pragmatical self-sufficiency, your hypocritical zeal,
-your pious frauds to stand in the gap of their prejudices and pretensions,
-to fly-blow and taint public opinion, to defeat independent
-efforts, to apply not the sting of the scorpion but the touch of the
-torpedo to youthful hopes, to crawl and leave the slimy track of
-sophistry and lies over every work that does not ‘dedicate its sweet
-leaves’ to some luminary of the Treasury Bench, or is not fostered
-in the hot-bed of corruption. This is your office; ‘this is what is
-looked for at your hands, and this you do not baulk’—to sacrifice
-what little honesty, and prostitute what little intellect you possess to
-any dirty job you are commissioned to execute. ‘They keep you
-as an ape does an apple, in the corner of his jaw, first mouthed to
-be last swallowed.’ You are, by appointment, literary toad-eater
-to greatness, and taster to the court. You have a natural aversion
-to whatever differs from your own pretensions, and an acquired one
-for what gives offence to your superiors. Your vanity panders to
-your interest, and your malice truckles only to your love of power.
-If your instinctive or premeditated abuse of your enviable trust were
-found wanting in a single instance; if you were to make a single
-slip in getting up your select Committee of Inquiry and Green Bag
-Report of the State of Letters, your occupation would be gone.
-You would never after obtain a squeeze of the hand from a great
-man, or a smile from a punk of quality. The great and powerful
-(whom you call the wise and good) do not like to have the privacy
-of their self-love startled by the obtrusive and unmanageable claims
-of literature and philosophy, except through the intervention of
-persons like you, whom, if they have common penetration, they soon
-find out to be without any superiority of intellect; or, if they do not,
-whom they can despise for their meanness of soul. You ‘have the
-office opposite to St. Peter.’ You ‘keep a corner in the public
-mind, for foul prejudice and corrupt power to knot and gender in’;
-you volunteer your services to people of quality to ease scruples of
-mind and qualms of conscience; you ‘lay the flattering unction’ of
-venal prose and laurelled verse to their souls. You persuade them
-that there is neither purity of morals, nor depth of understanding,
-except in themselves and their hangers-on; and would prevent the
-unhallowed names of liberty and humanity from being ever whispered
-in ears polite! You, Sir, do you not do all this? I cry you mercy
-then: I took you for the Editor of the Quarterly Review!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In general, you wisely avoid committing yourself upon any question,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_387'>387</span>farther than to hint a difference of opinion, and to assume an air of
-self-importance upon it. Thus you say, after quoting some remarks
-of mine, not very respectful to Henry <span class='fss'>VIII.</span> ‘We need not answer
-this gabble,’ as if you were offended at its absurdity, not at its truth;
-and were yourself ready to assert (were it worth while) that
-Henry <span class='fss'>VIII.</span> was an estimable character, or that he had not his
-minions and creatures about him in his life-time, who were proud
-to hail him as the best of kings. If so, you have the authority of
-Mr. Burke against you, who indulges himself in a very Jacobinical
-strain of invective against this bloated pattern of royalty, and brute-image
-of the Divinity. Do you mean to say, that the circumstances
-of external pomp and unbridled power, which I have pointed out in
-‘the gabble you will not answer’ as determining the character of
-kings, do not make them what for the most part they are, feared in
-their life-time and scorned by after-ages? If so, you must think
-Quevedo a libeller and incendiary, who makes his guide to the
-infernal regions, on being asked ‘if there were no more kings,’
-answer emphatically—‘Here are all that ever lived!’ You say
-that ‘the mention of a court or of a king always throws me into a
-fit of raving.’ Do you then really admire those plague spots of
-history, and scourges of human nature, Richard <span class='fss'>II.</span>, Richard <span class='fss'>III.</span>,
-King John, and Henry <span class='fss'>VIII.</span>? Do you with Mr. Coleridge, in his
-late Lectures, contend that not to fall down in prostration of soul
-before the abstract majesty of kings as it is seen in the diminished
-perspective of centuries, argues an inherent littleness of mind? Or
-do you extend the moral of your maxim—‘Speak not of the imputed
-weaknesses of the Great’—beyond the living to the dead, thus
-passing an attainder on history, and proving ‘truth to be a liar’ from
-the beginning? ‘Speak out, Grildrig!’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>You do well to confine yourself to the hypocrite; for you have
-too little talent for the sophist. Yet in two instances you have
-attempted an answer to an opinion I had expressed; and in both
-you have shewn how little you can understand the commonest question.
-The first is as follows:—‘In his remarks upon Coriolanus,
-which contain the concentrated venom of his malignity, he has
-libelled our great poet as a friend of arbitrary power, in order that
-he may introduce an invective against human nature. “Shakspeare
-himself seems to have had a leaning to the arbitrary side of the
-question, perhaps from some feeling of contempt for his own origin;
-and to have spared no occasion of baiting the rabble.”’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>How do you prove that he did not? By shewing with a little
-delicate insinuation how he would have done just what I say he did.—‘Shall
-we not be dishonouring the gentle Shakspeare by answering
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_388'>388</span>such calumny, when every page of his works supplies its refutation?’<a id='r83' /><a href='#f83' class='c012'><sup>[83]</sup></a>—‘Who
-has painted with more cordial feelings the tranquil innocence
-of humble life?’ [True.] ‘Who has furnished more instructive
-lessons to the great upon “the insolence of office”—“the oppressor’s
-wrong”—or the abuses of brief authority’—[which you would
-hallow through all time]—‘or who has more severely stigmatised
-those “who crook the pregnant hinges of the knee where thrift may
-follow fawning?”’ [Granted, none better.] ‘It is true he was not
-actuated by an envious hatred of greatness’—[so that to stigmatise
-servility and corruption does not always proceed from envy and a
-love of mischief]—‘he was not at all likely, had he lived in our
-time, to be an orator in Spa-fields or the editor of a seditious Sunday
-newspaper’—[To have delivered Mr. Coleridge’s <cite>Conciones ad
-Populum</cite>, or to have written Mr. Southey’s Wat Tyler]—‘he knew
-what discord would follow if degree were taken away’—[As it did
-in France from the taking away the degree between the tyrant and
-the slave, and those little convenient steps and props of it, the Bastile,
-<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Lettres de Cachet</span>, and Louis <span class='fss'>XV.</span>‘s <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Palais aux cerfs</span></cite>]—‘And <em>therefore</em>,
-with the wise and good of every age, he pointed out the injuries that
-must arise to society from a turbulent rabble instigated to mischief by
-men not much more enlightened, and infinitely more worthless than
-themselves.’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>So that it would appear by your own account that Shakspeare had
-a discreet leaning to the arbitrary side of the question, and, had he
-lived in our time, would probably have been a writer in the Courier,
-or a contributor to the Quarterly Review! It is difficult to know
-which to admire most in this, the weakness or the cunning. I have
-said that Shakspeare has described both sides of the question, and
-you ask me very wisely, ‘Did he confine himself to one?’ No, I
-say that he did not: but I suspect that he had a leaning to one side,
-and has given it more quarter than it deserved. My words are:
-‘<cite>Coriolanus</cite> is a storehouse of political common-places. The arguments
-for and against aristocracy and democracy, on the privileges
-of the few and the claims of the many, on liberty and slavery, power
-and the abuse of it, peace and war, are here very ably handled, with
-the spirit of a poet and the acuteness of a philosopher. Shakspeare
-himself seems to have had a leaning to the arbitrary side of the
-question, perhaps from some feeling of contempt for his own origin,
-and to have spared no occasion of baiting the rabble. <em>What he says
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_389'>389</span>of them is very true: what he says of their betters is also very true,
-though he dwells less upon it.</em>’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>I then proceed to account for this by shewing how it is that ‘the
-cause of the people is but little calculated for a subject for poetry;
-or that the language of poetry naturally falls in with the language of
-power.’ I affirm, Sir, that poetry, that the imagination, generally
-speaking, delights in power, in strong excitement, as well as in truth,
-in good, in right, whereas, pure reason and the moral sense approve
-only of the true and good. I proceed to shew that this general love
-or tendency to immediate excitement or theatrical effect, no matter
-how produced, gives a bias to the imagination often inconsistent with
-the greatest good, that in poetry it triumphs over principle, and bribes
-the passions to make a sacrifice of common humanity. You say that
-it does not, that there is no such original sin in poetry, that it makes
-no such sacrifice or unworthy compromise between poetical effect
-and the still small voice of reason. And how do you prove that
-there is no such principle giving a bias to the imagination, and a false
-colouring to poetry? Why by asking in reply to the instances where
-this principle operates, and where no other can, with much modesty
-and simplicity—‘But are these the only topics that afford delight in
-poetry, etc.’ No; but these objects do afford delight in poetry, and
-they afford it in proportion to their strong and often tragical effect,
-and not in proportion to the good produced, or their desirableness in
-a moral point of view. ‘Do we read with more pleasure of the
-ravages of a beast of prey, than of the shepherd’s pipe upon the
-mountain?’ No; but we do read with pleasure of the ravages of
-a beast of prey, and we do so on the principle I have stated, namely,
-from the sense of power abstracted from the sense of good; and it
-is the same principle that makes us read with admiration and reconciles
-us in fact to the triumphant progress of the conquerors and mighty
-hunters of mankind, who come to stop the shepherd’s pipe upon the
-mountains, and sweep away his listening flock. Do you mean to
-deny that there is anything imposing to the imagination in power,
-in grandeur, in outward shew, in the accumulation of individual
-wealth and luxury, at the expense of equal justice and the common
-weal? Do you deny that there is anything in ‘the pride, pomp,
-and circumstance of glorious war, that makes ambition virtue,’ in the
-eyes of admiring multitudes? Is this a new theory of the Pleasures
-of the Imagination, which says that the pleasures of the imagination
-do not take rise solely in the calculations of the understanding? Is
-it a paradox of my making, that ‘one murder makes a villain, millions
-a hero!’ Or is it not true that here, as in other cases, the enormity
-of the evil overpowers and makes a convert of the imagination by
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_390'>390</span>its very magnitude? You contradict my reasoning, because you
-know nothing of the question, and you think that no one has a right
-to understand what you do not. My offence against purity in the
-passage alluded to, ‘which contains the concentrated venom of my
-malignity,’ is, that I have admitted that there are tyrants and slaves
-abroad in the world; and you would hush the matter up, and pretend
-that there is no such thing, in order that there may be nothing
-else. Farther, I have explained the cause, the subtle sophistry of
-the human mind, that tolerates and pampers the evil, in order to
-guard against its approaches; you would conceal the cause in order
-to prevent the cure, and to leave the proud flesh about the heart to
-harden and ossify into one impenetrable mass of selfishness and
-hypocrisy, that we may not ‘sympathise in the distresses of suffering
-virtue’ in any case, in which they come in competition with the
-factitious wants and ‘imputed weaknesses of the great.’ You ask
-‘are we gratified by the cruelties of Domitian or Nero?’ No, not
-we—they were too petty and cowardly to strike the imagination at
-a distance; but the Roman Senate tolerated them, addressed their
-perpetrators, exalted them into Gods, the Fathers of their people;
-they had pimps and scribblers of all sorts in their pay, their Senecas,
-etc. till a turbulent rabble thinking that there were no injuries to
-society greater than the endurance of unlimited and wanton oppression,
-put an end to the farce, and abated the nuisance as well as
-they could. Had you and I lived in those times, we should have
-been what we are now, I ‘a sour mal-content,’ and you ‘a sweet
-courtier.’ Your reasoning is ill put together; it wants sincerity, it
-wants ingenuity. To prove that I am wrong in saying that the love
-of power and heartless submission to it extend beyond the tragic
-stage to real life, to prove that there has been nothing heard but
-the shepherd’s pipe upon the mountain, and that the still sad music
-of humanity has never filled up the pauses to the thoughtful ear, you
-bring in illustration the cruelties of Domitian and Nero, whom you
-suppose to have been without flatterers, train-bearers, or executioners,
-and ‘the crimes of revolutionary France of a still blacker die,’ (a
-sentence which alone would have entitled you to a post of honour
-and secrecy under Sejanus,) which you suppose to have been without
-aiders or abettors. You speak of the horrors of Robespierre’s
-reign; (there you tread on velvet;) do you mean that these
-atrocities excited nothing but horror in revolutionary France, in
-undelivered France, in Paris, the centre and focus of anarchy and
-crime; or that the enthusiasm and madness with which they were
-acted and applauded, was owing to nothing but a long-deferred
-desire for truth and justice, and the collected vengeance of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_391'>391</span>human race? You do not mean this, for you never mean anything
-that has even an approximation to unfashionable truth in it.
-You add, ‘We cannot recollect, however, that these crimes were
-heard of with much satisfaction in this country.’ Then you have
-forgotten the years 1793 and 94, you have forgotten the addresses
-against republicans and levellers, you have forgotten Mr. Burke and
-his 80,000 incorrigible Jacobins.—‘Nor had we the misfortune to
-know any individual, (though we will not take upon us to deny
-that Mr. Hazlitt may have been of that description,)’ (I will take
-upon me to deny that) ‘who cried havoc, and enjoyed the atrocities
-of Robespierre and Carnot.’ Then at that time, Sir, you had not
-the good fortune to know Mr. Southey.<a id='r84' /><a href='#f84' class='c012'><sup>[84]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To return, you find fault with my toleration of those pleasant
-persons, Lucio, Pompey, and Master Froth, in Measure for Measure,
-and with my use of the word ‘natural morality.’ And yet, ‘the
-word is a good word, being whereby a man may be accommodated.’
-If Pompey was a common bawd, you, Sir, are a court pimp. That
-is artificial morality. ‘Go to, a feather turns the scale of your
-avoir-du-pois.’ I have also, it seems, erred in using the term <em>moral</em>
-in a way not familiar to you, as opposed to <em>physical</em>; and in that
-sense have applied it to the description of the mole on Imogen’s
-neck, ‘cinque-spotted, like the crimson drops i’ th’ bottom of a
-cowslip.’ I have stated that there is more than a physical—there is
-a moral beauty in this image, and I think so still, though you may
-not comprehend how.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>You assert roundly that there is no such person as the black
-prince Morocchius,<a id='r85' /><a href='#f85' class='c012'><sup>[85]</sup></a> in the Merchant of Venice. ‘He, (Mr. Hazlitt,)
-objects entirely to a personage of whom we never heard before, the
-black Prince Marocchius. With this piece of blundering ignorance,
-<em>which, with</em> a thousand similar instances of his intimate acquaintance
-with the poet, clearly <em>prove</em> that his enthusiasm for Shakespear is
-all affected, we conclude what we have to say of his folly; it remains
-to say a few words of his mischief.’ Vol. xxxiv. p. 463. I could
-not at first, Sir, comprehend your drift in this passage, and I can
-scarcely believe it yet. But I perceive that in Chalmers’s edition,
-the tawny suitor of Portia, who is called Morocchius in my common
-edition, goes by the style and title of Morocco. This important
-discovery proves, according to you, that my admiration of Shakespear
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_392'>392</span>is all affected, and that I can know nothing of the poet or
-his characters. So that the only title to admiration in Shakespear,
-not only in the Merchant of Venice, but in his other plays, all knowledge
-of his beauties, or proof of an intimate acquaintance with his
-genius, is confined to the alteration which Mr. Chalmers has adopted
-in the termination of the two last syllables of the name of this
-blackamoor, and his reading Morocco for Morocchius. Admirable
-grammarian, excellent critic! I do not wonder you think nothing of
-my Characters of Shakespear’s Plays, when I see what it is that you
-really admire and think worth the study in them. No, no, Mr.
-Gifford, you shall not persuade me by your broken English and
-‘red-lattice phrases,’ that the only thing in Shakespear worth knowing,
-was the baptismal name of this Prince of Morocco, or that no
-one can admire the author’s plays out of Mr Chalmers’s edition, or
-find anything to admire even there, except the new nomenclature of
-the <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">dramatis personæ</span></i>. If this is not your meaning in the passage
-here quoted, I do not know what it is; if it is not, I have done you
-great injustice in supposing that it is, for I am sure it cannot mean
-anything else so foolish and contemptible. You had begun this
-curious paragraph by saying, that ‘I had run through my set of
-phrases, and was completely at a stand’; and you bring as a damning
-proof of this, a repetition of two phrases. Do you believe that I had
-filled 300 pages with the repetition of two phrases? ‘Go, go, you’re
-a censorious ill man.’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The deliberate hypocrisy of Regan and Gonerill, of which I
-spoke, I had explained in the sentence before by a periphrasis to
-mean their ‘hypocritical pretensions to virtue.’ If I had no right to
-use the word hastily in this absolute sense, you had still less to
-confound the meaning of a whole passage. Edmund is indeed ‘a
-hypocrite to his father; he is a hypocrite to his brother, and to
-Regan and Gonerill’; but he is not a hypocrite to himself. This
-is that consummation of hypocrisy of which I spoke, and of which
-you ought to know something.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>I have commenced my observations on Lear, you say, with ‘an
-acknowledgment remarkable for its <em>naiveté</em> and its truth’; the
-import of which remarkable acknowledgment is, that I find myself
-incompetent to do justice to this tragedy, by any criticism upon it.
-This you construe into a ‘determination on my part to write
-nonsense’; you seem, Sir, to have sat down with a determination to
-write something worse than nonsense. As a proof of my having
-fulfilled the promise, (which I had <em>not</em> made,) you cite these words,
-‘It is then the best of all Shakespear’s plays, for it is the one in
-which he was <em>most in earnest</em>‘; and add significantly, ‘Macbeth and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_393'>393</span>Othello were mere <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">jeux d’esprit</span></i>, we presume.’ You may presume so,
-but not from what I have said. You only aim at being a word-catcher,
-and fail even in that. In like manner, you say, ‘If this
-means that we sympathise so much with the feelings and sentiments
-of Hamlet, that we identify ourselves with the character, we have to
-accuse Mr. Hazlitt of strangely misleading us a few pages back.
-“The moral of <cite>Othello</cite> comes directly home to the business and
-bosoms of men; the interest in <cite>Hamlet</cite> is more <em>remote</em> and reflex.”
-And yet it is we who are Hamlet.’—Yes, because we sympathise
-with Hamlet, in the way I have explained, and which you ought to
-have endeavoured at least to understand, as reflecting and moralising
-on the general distresses of human life, and not as particularly affected
-by those which come home to himself, as we see in Othello. You
-accuse me of stringing words together without meaning, and it is you
-who cannot connect two ideas together.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>You call me ‘a poor cankered creature,’ ‘a trader in sedition,’ ‘a
-wicked sophist,’ and yet you would have it believed that I am ‘principally
-distinguished by an <em>indestructible</em> love of flowers and odours,
-and dews and clear waters, and soft airs and sounds and bright skies,
-and woodland solitudes and moonlight bowers.’<a id='r86' /><a href='#f86' class='c012'><sup>[86]</sup></a> I do not understand
-how you reconcile such ‘welcome and unwelcome things,’ but
-anything will do to feed your spleen at another’s expence, when it is
-the person and not the thing you dislike. Thus you complain of my
-style, that it is at times figurative, at times poetical, at times familiar,
-not always the same flat dull thing that you would have it. You
-point out the omission of a line in a quotation from a well-known
-passage in Shakespear. You do not however think the detection of
-this omission is a sufficient proof of your sagacity, but you proceed to
-assign as a motive for it, ‘That I do it to improve the metre,’ which
-is ridiculous. You say I conjure up objections to Shakespear which
-nobody ever thought of, in order to answer them. The objection
-to Romeo and Juliet, which I have answered, was made by the late
-Mr. Curran, as well as the objection to the want of interest and
-action in Paradise Lost, which I have answered in another place.—‘Thus
-he endeavours to convince one class of critics, that the
-poet’s genius was not confined to the production of stage effect by
-supernatural means. In another place he expresses his astonishment
-that Shakespear should be considered as a gloomy writer, who
-painted nothing but gorgons, hydras, and chimeras dire.’ One of
-these classes of critics which, you say, ‘are phantoms of my own
-creating,’ comprehends the whole French nation, and the other the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_394'>394</span>greatest part of the English with Dr. Johnson at their head, who in
-his Preface, ‘one of the most perfect pieces of criticism since the
-days of Quintilian’ (and which might have been written in the days
-of Quintilian just as well as in ours) has neglected to expatiate on
-Shakespear’s ‘<em>indestructible</em> love of flowers and odours, and woodland
-solitudes and moonlight bowers.’ You know nothing of Shakespear,
-nor of what is thought about him: you mind only the text of the commentators.
-With respect to Mr. Wordsworth’s Ode, which I have
-dragged into my account of Romeo and Juliet, I did not quarrel with
-the poetical conceit, but with the metaphysical doctrine founded upon
-it by his school. There is a difference between ‘ends of verse and
-sayings of philosophers.’ If Shakespear had been a great German
-transcendental philosopher (either at the first or second hand) his
-talking of the music of the spheres might have rendered him suspected.
-You compare my account of Hamlet to the dashing style of
-a showman: I think the showman’s speech is proper to a show, and
-mine to Hamlet. You, Sir, have no sympathy in common with
-Hamlet; nothing to make him seem ever ‘present to your mind’s eye’;
-no feeling to produce such an hallucination in your mind, nor to make
-you tolerate it in others. You are an Ultra-Crepidarian critic.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>You laugh at my theory, that ‘Filch’s picking of pockets has
-ceased to be so good a jest as formerly,’ from the degeneracy of the
-age, that is, from the diminution of the practice, as at variance with
-the Police Report. Shortly after I had hazarded this piece of
-conjectural criticism, the Beggar’s Opera was hooted off the stage in
-America—because they have no Police Report there. I may have
-been premature in applying this conclusion from a highly advanced
-state of civilization, or from the degeneracy of the age we live in, to
-our own country.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>What you say of my remarks on the use which Shakespear makes
-of the principal analogy in Cymbeline, and of contrast in Macbeth is
-beneath an answer. You should confine yourself to mere matters of
-verbal criticism. Thus you object to my use of the term ‘logical
-diagrams’ as unprecedented and barbarous: yet we talk of syllogising
-in mode and figure, and besides, the word has been made pretty
-malleable by Mr. Burke. What do you say to his talking of ‘the
-geometricians and chemists of France, bringing the one from the dry
-bones of their diagrams, and the other from the soot of their furnaces,
-dispositions worse than indifferent to common feelings and habitudes.’
-Would you call this ‘slip-slop absurdity’? But to talk of <em>the dry bones
-of diagrams</em>, and escape with impunity from the censure of small critics,
-a man must assert that the king of this country ‘holds his crown in
-contempt of the choice of the people.’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_395'>395</span>I am obliged to you for informing me of the real name of the
-person who wrote the ingenious parallel between Richard the Third
-and Macbeth.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The article in the last Review on my Lectures on English Poetry,
-requires a very short notice.—You would gladly retract what you
-have said, but you dare not. You are a coward to public opinion and
-to your own. You begin by observing, ‘Mr. Hazlitt seems to have
-bound himself like Hannibal to wage everlasting war, not indeed
-against Rome, but against accurate reasoning, just observation, and
-precise, or even intelligible language.’ This might be true, if the
-opinion of the Quarterly Review were synonymous with accurate
-reasoning, just observation, and knowledge of language. ‘We have
-traced him in his two former predatory excursions on taste and
-common sense. Had he written on any other subject, we should
-scarcely have thought of watching his movements.’ You were
-‘principally excited to notice’ the Round Table by some political
-heresies which had crept into it: you ‘condescended to notice’ the
-Characters of Shakespear’s Plays, ‘to shew how small a portion of
-talent and literature was necessary to carry on the trade of sedition.’
-You have been tempted to watch my movements in the present work
-to shew how little talent and literature is necessary to write a popular
-work on poetry. ‘But though his book is dull, his theme is pleasing,
-and interests in spite of the author. As we read, we forget Mr.
-Hazlitt, to think of those concerning whom he writes.’ Do you
-think, Sir, that a higher compliment could come from you?</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It would neither be for my credit nor your own, that I should
-follow you in detail through your abortive attempts to deny me
-exactly those qualifications which you feel conscious that I possess,
-or afraid that others will ascribe to me. You are already bankrupt
-of your word, nor can I be admitted as an evidence in my own case.
-You say that I am utterly without originality, without a power of
-illustration, or language to make myself understood!—I shall leave it
-to the public to judge between us. There is one objection however
-which you make to me which is singular enough: viz. that I quote
-Shakespear. I can only answer, that ‘I would not change that vice
-for your best virtue.’ ‘If a trifling thing is to be told, he will not
-mention it in common language: he must give it, if possible, in words
-which the Bard of Avon has <em>somewhere</em> used. Were <em>the beauty of
-the applications conspicuous</em>, we might forget or at least forgive, <em>the
-deformity</em> produced <em>by the constant stitching in of these patches</em>‘—[<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">i.e.</span></i> by
-the beauty of the applications]. ‘Unfortunately, however, the
-phrases thus obtruded upon us <em>seem</em> to be selected, not on account of
-<em>any intrinsic beauty</em>, but merely because they are <em>fantastic and unlike
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_396'>396</span>what would naturally occur to an ordinary writer</em>.’ Certainly, Sir,
-your style is very different from Shakespear’s. I observe in your
-notes to the Baviad and Mæviad, you diversify your matter by
-frequently quoting Greek.—Now it appears to me that these quotations
-of your’s add to the wit only by varying the type. If these
-learned patches ‘plagued the Cruscas and Lauras,’ my quotations
-have given other people ‘the horrors’!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>You quote my definition of poetry, and say that it is not a definition
-of anything, because it is completely unintelligible. To prove this,
-you take one word which occurs in it, and is no way important, the
-word <em>sympathy</em>, which you tell us has two significations, one anatomical,
-and the other moral; and poetry, according to you, ‘has no skill in
-surgery or ethics.’ I do not think this shews a want of clearness in
-my definition, but a want of good faith or understanding in you.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>You say that I get at a number of extravagant conclusions ‘by means
-sufficiently simple and common. He employs the term poetry in
-three distinct meanings, and his legerdemain consists in substituting
-one of these for the other. Sometimes it is the general appellation of
-a certain class of compositions, as when he says that poetry is graver
-than history. Secondly, it denotes the talent by which these compositions
-are produced; and it is in this sense that he calls poetry
-that fine particle within us, which produces in our being rarefaction,
-expansion, elevation and purification.’ [This is Mr. Gifford’s
-academic style, not mine.] ‘Thirdly, it denotes the subjects of
-which these compositions treat. It is in this meaning that he uses
-the term, when he says that all that is worth remembering in life is
-the poetry of it; that fear is poetry, that hope is poetry, that love
-is poetry; and in the very same sense he might assert that fear
-is sculpture and painting and music; that the crimes of Verres are
-the eloquence of Cicero, and the poetry of Milton the criticism of
-Mr. Hazlitt.’ It is true I have used the word poetry in the three
-senses above imputed to me, and I have done so, because the word
-has these three <em>distinct</em> meanings in the English language, that is, it
-signifies the composition produced, the state of mind or faculty
-producing it, and, in certain cases, the subject-matter proper to call
-forth that state of mind. Your objection amounts to this, that in
-reasoning on a difficult question I write common English, and this
-is the whole secret of my extravagance and obscurity.—Do you
-mean that the distinguishing between the compositions of poetry, the
-talent for poetry, or the subject-matter of poetry, would have told us
-what <em>poetry</em> is? This is what you would say, or you have no meaning
-at all. I have expressly treated the subject according to this
-very division, and I have endeavoured to define that common something
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_397'>397</span>which belongs to these several views of it, and determines us
-in the application of the same common name, viz. an unusual vividness
-in external objects or in our immediate impressions, exciting a
-movement of imagination in the mind, and leading by natural association
-or <em>sympathy</em> to harmony of sound and the modulation of verse in
-expressing it. This is what you, Sir, cannot understand. I could
-not ‘assert in the same sense that fear is sculpture and painting, etc.’
-because this would be an abuse of the English language: we talk of
-the <em>poetry of painting</em>, etc. which could not be, if poetry was confined
-to the technical sense of ‘lines in ten syllables.’ The crimes
-of Verres, I also grant, were not the same thing as the eloquence of
-Cicero, though I suspect you confound the crimes of revolutionary
-France with Mr. Pitt’s speeches; and as to Milton’s poetry and my
-criticisms, there is almost as much difference between them as
-between Milton’s poetry and your verses. You say, ‘the principal
-subjects of which poetry treats, are the passions and affections of
-mankind; we are all under the influence of our passions and affections,
-that is, in Mr. Hazlitt’s new language, we all act on the
-principles of poetry, and are in truth all poets. We all exert our
-muscles and limbs, therefore we are anatomists and surgeons; we
-have teeth which we employ in chewing, therefore we are dentists,’
-etc. Not at all; we are all poets, inasmuch as we are under the
-influence of the passions and imagination, that is, as we have certain
-common feelings, and undergo the same process of mind with the
-poet, who only expresses in a particular manner what he and all feel
-alike; but in exerting our muscles, we do not dissect them; in
-chewing with our teeth, we do not perform the part of dentists, etc.
-There is nothing parallel in the two cases. ‘You anticipate,’ you
-say, ‘these brilliant conclusions for me’; and do not perceive the
-difference between the extension of a logical principle, and an abuse
-of common language.—You proceed, ‘As another specimen of his
-definitions, we may take the following. “Poetry does not define the
-limits of sense, nor analyse the distinctions of the understanding, but
-signifies the excess of the imagination beyond the actual or ordinary
-impression of any object or feeling.” Poetry was at the beginning
-of the book asserted to be <em>an impression</em>; it is now <em>the excess of the
-imagination beyond an impression</em>; what this excess is we cannot tell,
-but at least it must be something very unlike an impression.’ Poetry
-at the beginning of the book was asserted to be not simply an
-impression, ‘but an impression <em>by its vividness exciting an involuntary
-movement of the imagination</em>: now, you say it is <em>the excess of the
-imagination beyond an impression</em>; and you bring this as a proof of a
-contradiction in terms. An impression, by its vividness exciting a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_398'>398</span>movement of the imagination, you discover, must be something very
-unlike an impression, and as to the imagination itself, you cannot tell
-what it is; it is an unknown power in your poetical creed. What is
-most extraordinary is, that you had quoted the very passage which
-you here represent as a total contradiction to the latter, only two
-pages before. What, Sir, do you think of your readers? What
-must they think of you!—‘Though the <em>total want of meaning</em>,’ you
-add, ‘is the weightiest objection to such writing, yet <em>the abuse</em> which
-it involves of <em>particular words and phrases</em>’ (in addition to a total
-want of meaning) ‘is very remarkable,’ (it must be so,) ‘and will
-not be overlooked by those who are aware of the inseparable connexion
-between justness of thought and precision of language.’
-(You are not aware that there is no precise measure of thought or
-expression.) ‘What, in strict reasoning, can be meant by the
-impression of a feeling?’ (The impression which it makes on the
-mind, as distinct from some other to which it gives birth, is what I
-meant.) ‘How can <em>actual</em> and <em>ordinary</em> be used as synonymous?’
-(They are not.) ‘Every impression must be an actual impression’;
-(there is then no such thing as an imaginary impression;) ‘and the
-use of that epithet annihilates the limitations which Mr. Hazlitt
-meant’ (in the total want of all meaning,) ‘to guard his proposition.’
-<em>We must speak by the card, or equivocation will undo us.</em> You say,
-‘you have not the faintest conception of what I mean by the heavenly
-bodies returning on the squares of the distances or on Dr. Chalmers’s
-Discourses.’ Nor will I tell you what I meant. <em>A knavish speech
-sleeps in a fool’s ear.</em> ‘As to the assertion that there can never be
-another Jacob’s dream, we see no reason why dreams should be
-scientific.’ Shakespear says, that dreams ‘<em>denote a foregone conclusion</em>.’
-You quote what I say of Swift, and misrepresent it.
-‘Mr. Hazlitt’s doctrine, therefore, is, that the inability to become
-mad, is very likely to drive a man mad.’ My doctrine is, that the
-inability to get rid of a favourite idea, when constantly thwarted, or
-of the impression of any object, however painful, merely because it is
-true, is likely to drive a man mad. It is this tenaciousness on a
-particular point that almost always destroys the general coherence of
-the understanding. I do not say that the inability to get rid of the
-distinction between right and wrong continued in Swift’s mind after
-he was mad—I say it contributed to drive him mad. I mean that a
-sense of great injustice often produces madness in individual cases,
-and that a strong sense of general injustice, and an abstracted view of
-human nature such as it is, compared with what it ought to be, is
-likely to produce the same effect in a mind like that of the author of
-Gulliver’s Travels. Do you understand yet? You do not go into
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_399'>399</span>my general character of Swift, which might have drawn you into
-something of a wider field of speculation; and you pick out a straggling
-sentence or two to cavil at in my account of Pope, of Chaucer,
-of Milton, and Shakespear, on which you are glad to discharge the
-gall that has been accumulating in your mind for several pages. If
-you think by this means, to put me or the public out of conceit with
-my writings, you have mistaken the matter entirely. You can only
-put down my arguments by meeting them fairly, or my style, by
-writing better than you do.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>‘We occasionally,’ you proceed, ‘discover a faint semblance of
-connected thinking in Mr. Hazlitt’s pages; but wherever this is the
-case, his reasoning is for the most part incorrect.’ This is a curious
-inference. ‘This faint semblance of connected thinking,’ is, it
-appears, when I maintain some opinion, which is ‘a sprout from
-some popular doctrine’; but if I push it a little farther than you
-were aware of, my reasoning becomes incorrect. Thus it has been a
-popular doctrine with some critics, (which yet you do not admit)—‘That
-the progress of science is unfavourable to the culture of the
-imagination. It is no doubt true, that the individual who devotes his
-labour to the investigation of abstract truth, must acquire habits of
-thought very different from those which the exercise of the fancy
-demands.’ You add in italics, ‘<em>the cause lies in the exclusive appropriation
-of his time to reasoning, and not in the logical accuracy with
-which he reasons</em>.’ Whenever I have any discovery to communicate,
-which I think you cannot comprehend, I will in future put it in italics,
-to make it equally profound and clear. It appears by you, that the
-incompatibility between the successful pursuit of different studies does
-not arise from anything incompatible in the studies themselves, but
-from the time devoted to each. The mind is equally incapacitated
-from passing from one to the other, whether they are the most
-opposite or the most alike. The dreams of alchemy, and the schemes
-of astrology, the traditional belief in the doctrine of ghosts and fairies,
-though made up almost entirely of imagination, self-will, superstition
-and romance, were not a jot more favourable to the caprices and
-fanciful exaggerations of poetry, either in the public mind, or in that
-of individuals, than the modern system which excludes (both by the
-logical accuracy with which it proceeds, and a constant appeal to
-demonstrable facts), every alloy of passion, and all exercise of the
-imagination. You should never put your thoughts in italics. If I
-were to attempt a character of verbal critics, I should be apt to say,
-that their habits of mind disqualify them for general reasoning or fair
-discussion: that they are furious about trifles, because they have
-nothing else to interest them; that they have no way of giving
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_400'>400</span>dignity to their insignificant discoveries, but by treating those who
-have missed them with contempt; that they are dogmatical and
-conceited, in proportion as they have little else to guide them in
-their quaint researches but caprice and accident; that the want of
-intellectual excitement gives birth to increasing personal irritability,
-and endless petty altercation. You, Sir, would make all this self-evident,
-by the help of italics, and say, that <em>the cause lies not in anything
-in the nature of verbal criticism, but the exclusive appropriation of
-their time to it</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>You next run foul of my account of the pleasure derived from
-tragedy. You are afraid to understand what I say on any subject,
-and it is not therefore likely you should ever detect what is erroneous
-in it. I have shewn by a reference to facts, and to the authority of
-Mr. Burke (whom you would rather contradict than believe me)
-that the objects which are supposed to please only in fiction, please in
-reality; that ‘if there were known to be a public execution of some state
-criminal in the next street, the theatre would soon be empty’—that
-therefore the pleasure derived from tragedy is not anything peculiar
-to it, as poetry or fiction; but has its ground in the common love
-of strong excitement. You say, I have misstated the fact, to give a
-false view of the question, which, according to you, is ‘why that
-which is painful in itself, pleases in works of fiction.’ I answer,
-I have shewn that this is not a fair statement of the question, by
-stating the fact, that what is painful in itself, pleases not the sufferer
-indeed, but the spectator, in reality as well as in works of fiction.
-The common proverb proves it—‘What is sport to one, is death to
-another.’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>You observe, that ‘Some lines I have quoted from Chaucer, are
-very pleasing—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in8'>——“Emelie that fayrer was to sene</div>
- <div class='line'>Than is the lilie upon his stalke grene,</div>
- <div class='line'>And fresher than the May with floures newe:</div>
- <div class='line'>For with the rose-colour strove hire hewe;</div>
- <div class='line'>I n’ot which was the finer of hem too.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>‘But surely the beauty does not lie in the last line, though it is
-with this that Mr. Hazlitt is chiefly struck. “This scrupulousness”
-he observes, “about the literal preference, as if some question of
-matter of fact were at issue, is remarkable.”’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>That is, I am not chiefly struck with the beauty of the last line,
-but with its peculiarity as characteristic of Chaucer. The beauty of
-the former lines might be in Spenser: the scrupulous exactness of
-the latter could be found nowhere but in Chaucer. I had said just
-before, that this poet ‘introduces a sentiment or a simile, as if it were
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_401'>401</span>given in upon evidence.’ I bring this simile as an instance in point,
-and you say I have not brought it to prove something else.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>You charge me with misrepresenting Longinus, and prove that I
-have not. The word <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ἐναγώνιον</span> signifies not as you are pleased to
-paraphrase it ‘vehemently energetic,’ but simply ‘full of contests.’
-Must the Greek language be new-fangled, to prove that I am ignorant
-of it?</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The only mistake you are able to point out, is a slip of the pen,
-which you will find to have been corrected long ago in the second
-edition.—Your pretending to say that Dr. Johnson was an admirer
-of Milton’s blank verse, is not a slip of the pen—you know he was
-not. There is as little sincerity in your concluding paragraph. You
-would ascribe what little appearance of thought there is in my writings
-to a confusion of images, and what appearance there is of imagination
-to a gaudy phraseology. If I had neither words nor ideas, I should
-be a profound philosopher and critic. How fond you are of reducing
-every one else to your own standard of excellence!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>I have done what I promised. You complain of the difficulty of
-remembering what I write; possibly this Letter will prove an exception.
-There is a train of thought in your own mind, which will
-connect the links together: and before you again undertake to run
-down a writer for no other reason, than that he is of an opposite
-party to yourself, you will perhaps recollect that your wilful artifices
-and shallow cunning, though they pass undetected, will hardly screen
-you from your own contempt, nor, when once exposed, will the gratitude
-of your employers save you from public scorn.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Your conduct to me is no new thing: it is part of a system which
-has been regularly followed up for many years. Mr. Coleridge, in
-his Literary Life, has the following passage to shew the treatment
-which he and his friends received from your predecessor, the editor
-of the Anti-Jacobin Review.—‘I subjoin part of a note from the
-Beauties of the Anti-Jacobin, in which having previously informed
-the public that I had been dishonoured at Cambridge for preaching
-Deism, at a time when for my youthful ardour in defence of Christianity
-I was decried as a bigot by the proselytes of French philosophy,
-the writer concludes with these words—“<em>Since this time he has left his
-native country, commenced citizen of the world, left his poor children
-fatherless, and his wife destitute. <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Ex hoc disce</span> his friends, Lamb and
-Southey.</em>” With severest truth,’ continues Mr. Coleridge, ‘it may
-be asserted that it would not be easy to select two men more exemplary
-in their domestic affections than those whose names were thus
-printed at full length, as in the same rank of morals with a denounced
-infidel and fugitive, who had left his children fatherless, and his wife
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_402'>402</span>destitute! <em>Is it surprising that many good men remained longer than
-perhaps they otherwise would have done, adverse to a party which
-encouraged and openly rewarded the authors of such atrocious calumnies?</em>’</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>With me, I confess, the wonder does not lie there:—all I am
-surprised at is, that the objects of these atrocious calumnies were ever
-reconciled to the authors of them and their patrons. Doubtless, they
-had powerful arts of conversion in their hands, who could with
-impunity and in triumph take away by atrocious calumnies the characters
-of all who disdained to be their tools; and rewarded with
-honours, places, and pensions all those who were. It is in this
-manner, Sir, that some of my old friends have become your new
-allies and associates.—They have changed sides, not I; and the
-proof that I have been true to the original ground of quarrel is, that
-I have you against me. Your consistency is the undeniable pledge
-of their tergiversation. The instinct of self-interest and meanness
-of servility are infallible and safe; it is speculative enthusiasm and
-disinterested love of public good, that being the highest strain of
-humanity, are apt to falter, and ‘dying, make a swan-like end.’
-This tendency to change was, in the case of our poetical reformists,
-precipitated by another cause. The spirit of poetry is, as I believe,
-favourable to liberty and humanity, but not when its aid is most
-wanted, in encountering the shocks and disappointments of the
-world. Poetry may be described as having the range of the
-universe; it traverses the empyrean, and looks down on nature from
-a higher sphere. When it lights upon the earth, it loses some of
-its dignity and its use. Its strength is in its wings; its element
-is the air. Standing on its feet, jostling with the crowd, it is liable
-to be overthrown, trampled on, and defaced; for its wings are of a
-dazzling brightness, ‘sky-tinctured,’ and the least soil upon them
-shews to disadvantage. Sullied, degraded as I have seen it, I shall
-not here insult over it, but leave it to Time to take out the stains,
-seeing it is a thing immortal as itself. ‘Being so majestical, I should
-do it wrong to offer it but the shew of violence.’—The reason why
-I have not changed my principles with some of the persons here
-alluded to, is, that I had a natural inveteracy of understanding which
-did not bend to fortune or circumstances. I was not a poet, but a
-metaphysician; and I suspect that the conviction of an abstract principle
-is alone a match for the prejudices of absolute power. The
-love of truth is the best foundation for the love of liberty. In this
-sense, I might have repeated—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Love is not love that alteration finds:</div>
- <div class='line'>Oh! no, it is an everfixed mark,</div>
- <div class='line'>That looks on tempests and is never shaken.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_403'>403</span>Besides, I had another reason. I owed something to truth, for
-she had done something for me. Early in life I had made (what
-I thought) a metaphysical discovery; and after that, it was too late to
-think of retracting. My pride forbad it: my understanding revolted
-at it. I could not do better than go on as I had begun. I too, worshipped
-at no unhallowed shrine, and served in no mean presence. I
-had laid my hand on the ark, and could not turn back! I have been
-called ‘a writer of third-rate books.’ For myself, there is no work
-of mine which I should rate so high, except one, which I dare say you
-never heard of—An Essay on the Principles of Human Action. I do
-not think the worse of it on that account; nor though you might not
-be able to understand it, could you attribute this to the gaudiness of the
-phraseology, nor the want of thought. I will here, Sir, explain the
-nature of the argument as clearly and in as few words as I can.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The object of that Essay (and I have written this Letter partly
-to introduce it through you to the notice of the reader) is to leave
-free play to the social affections, and to the cultivation of the more
-disinterested and generous principles of our nature, by removing a
-stumbling-block which has been thrown in their way, and which
-turns the very idea of virtue or humanity into a fable, viz. the metaphysical
-doctrine of the innate and necessary selfishness of the human
-mind. Do you understand so far? The question I propose to
-examine is not the practical question, how far man is more or less
-selfish or social in the actual sum-total of his habits and affections,
-nor the moral or political question, to what degree of perfection he
-can be advanced still further in the one, or weaned from the other;
-but my intention is to state and answer the previous question, whether
-there is, as it has been contended, a total incapacity and physical
-impossibility in the human mind, of feeling an interest in anything
-beyond itself, so that both the common feelings of compassion,
-natural affection, friendship, etc. and the more refined and abstracted
-ones of the love of justice, of country, or of kind, are, and must be
-a delusion, believed in only by fools, and turned to their advantage
-by knaves. This doctrine which has been sedulously and confidently
-maintained by the French and English metaphysicians of the two
-last centuries, by Hobbes, Mandeville, Rochefoucault, Helvetius
-and others, and is a principal corner-stone of what is called the
-modern philosophy, I think tends to, and has done a great deal of
-mischief, and I believe I have found out a view of the subject, which
-gets rid of it unanswerably and for ever, in manner and form following.
-I conceive, that to establish the doctrine of exclusive and
-absolute selfishness on a metaphysical basis, that is to say, on the
-original and impassable distinction of the faculties of the human
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_404'>404</span>mind, it is necessary to make it appear, that there is some peculiar
-and abstracted principle which gives it an immediate, mechanical, and
-irresistible interest in whatever relates to itself, and which by the
-same rule shuts out and is a bar to the very possibility of our feeling
-not an equal, but any kind or degree of interest whatever, at any
-moment of our lives, in the history and fate of others. This is so
-far from being true, that the contrary is demonstrable. Thus, Sir,
-My self-interest in anything signifies (by the statement) the particular
-manner in which whatever relates to myself affects me, so as
-to create an anxiety about it, and be a motive to action. Now the
-same word, <em>self</em>, is indifferently applied to the whole of my being,
-past, present, and to come; and it is supposed from the use of
-language and the habitual association of ideas, that this self is <em>one
-thing</em> as well as one word, and my interest in it all along the same
-necessary, identical interest. That a man must love himself as such,
-seems a self-evident and simple proposition. The idea appears like
-an absolute truth, and resists every attempt at analysis, like an element
-in nature. Some persons, who formerly took the pains to read this
-work, imagined (do not be alarmed, Sir!) that I wanted to argue
-them out of their own existence, merely because I endeavoured to
-define the nature and meaning of this word, self; to take in pieces,
-by metaphysical aid, this fine illusion of the brain and forgery of
-language, and to shew what there is real, and what false in it. The
-word denotes, by common consent, three different selves, my past,
-my present, and my future self. Now it is taken for granted by
-some, and insisted upon by others, that I must have the same unavoidable
-interest in all these, because they are all equally myself.
-But that is impossible; for in truth my personal identity is founded
-only on my personal consciousness, and that does not extend beyond
-the present moment.—It must be maintained, on the other side of
-the question, that my past, my present, and my future self are inseparably
-linked together, equally identified by an intimate communion of
-transferable thoughts and feelings in one metaphysical principle of self-interest,
-before they can be equally myself, the same identical thing, to
-any purpose of sentiment or for any motive of action. It will easily
-be seen how far this is the case, and how far it is not. I have a
-peculiar, exclusive self-interest or sympathy (never mind the word,
-Sir,) with my present self, by means of sensation (or consciousness),
-and with my past self, by means of memory, which I have not, and
-cannot have with the past or present feelings or interests of others;
-for this reason that these faculties are exclusive, peculiar, and confined
-to myself. But I have no exclusive, or peculiar, or independent
-faculty, like sensation or memory, giving me the same absolute,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_405'>405</span>unavoidable, instinctive interest in my own future sensations, and none
-at all in those of others. This ideal self is then nominally the same,
-but strictly different; composed of distinct and unequal parts; bound
-together by laws and principles which have no parity of relation to
-each other. By shewing how personal identity produces self-interest
-as far as it goes, we shall see exactly when and how it ceases.—If
-I touch a burning coal, this gives me a present sensation differing
-in kind and degree from any impression I can receive from the
-same sensation being inflicted on another: there is no communication
-between another’s nerves and my brain producing a correspondent
-jar and magnetic sympathy of frame. Again, if I have suffered
-a pain of this sort in time past, this leaves traces in my mind, by my
-continued identity with myself, or by means of memory, of a kind
-totally distinct from any conception I can form of the same pain
-inflicted a year ago (for instance) on another. These two important
-faculties then give me an appropriate and exclusive interest only in
-what happens or has happened to myself. So far as the operation of
-these two faculties goes, I am strictly a selfish being, I am necessarily
-cut off from all knowledge of or sympathy with the feelings of any
-one but myself. But if I am to undergo a certain pain at a future
-time, the next year or the next moment, however near or remote, I
-have no faculty impressing this feeling intuitively and with mechanical
-force and certainty on my mind beforehand, as my present or past
-impressions are stamped upon it by means of sensation and memory.
-I have no principle of thought or sentiment in the original conformation
-of my mind, projecting me forward into my future being, giving
-me a present unavoidable consciousness of it, and removed from all
-cognisance of what happens to others; I have no faculty identifying
-my future interests inseparably with my present feelings, and therefore
-I have no exclusive, mechanical and proper self-interest in them,
-merely because they are mine: for that which is <em>mine</em>, is that which
-touches me by secret springs, and in a way in which what relates to
-others can take no hold of me. The only faculty by which I can
-anticipate what is to befal myself in future, is the same common and
-disposable faculty in kind and in mode of operation, by which I can,
-I do, and must anticipate in degree, and more or less according to
-circumstances, the feelings and thoughts of others, and take a proportionable
-interest in them, viz. the Imagination. To suppose that
-there is a principle of self-interest in the mind, without a faculty
-of self-interest, is an absurdity and a contradiction. This idea of
-an abstract, exclusive, metaphysical self-interest in my own being
-generally, is taken (by a gross and blind prejudice) from the manner
-in which the faculties of sensation and memory affect me, and applied
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_406'>406</span>to a part of my being, where I have no such interest in myself,
-because I have no such faculty giving it me. What proves that there is
-no mechanical sympathy identifying my future with my present being,
-is, that I am for the most part, indifferent to, ignorant of what is to
-happen to myself hereafter. There is no presentiment in the case.
-If the house is about to fall on my head, this occasions no uneasiness
-to my self-love, unless there are circumstances to alarm my imagination
-beforehand. To suppose, that besides the ideal or rational
-interest I have in the event, I have another <em>real</em> metaphysical interest
-in it, without object or consciousness, is as if I should say, that I
-have a particular interest in the past, without remembering it, or in
-the present without feeling it.—But the future is the only subject of
-action, that is, of a practical or rational interest at all, either of self-love
-or benevolence. All voluntary action, that is, all action undertaken
-with a view to produce a certain event or the contrary, must
-relate to the future. The primary, essential motive of the volition of
-anything must be the <em>idea</em> of that thing, and the idea solely. For the
-thing itself, which is the object of desire and pursuit, is by the
-supposition a nonentity. It is <em>willed</em> for that very reason, that it is
-supposed not to exist. If it did exist, or had existed, it would be
-absurd to will it to exist or not to exist; and as a thing which does
-not exist, but which we will to be or not to be, it is a mere fiction of
-the mind, and can exert no power over the thoughts, nor influence
-the will or the affections in any way, except through the imagination.
-The future, whether as it relates to myself or others, exists
-only in the mind; and in the mind, not by memory, not by sensation,
-which are exclusive and selfish faculties, but by the imagination,
-which is not a limited, narrow faculty, but common, discursive, and
-social. If my sympathy with others is not a sensible substantial
-mechanical interest, neither is my self-interest anything but an imaginary
-and ideal one, I am bound to my future interest only by
-the same fine links of fancy and reason, which give that of others a
-hold on my affections. As a voluntary agent, I am necessarily, and
-in the first instance, that is, in the metaphysical sense of the question,
-a disinterested one. I could not love myself, if I were not so formed,
-as to be capable of loving others. I have no solid, material, gross,
-actual self-interest in my own future welfare, and I therefore can only
-have the same airy, notional, hypothetical interest in it, which I
-must have in kind, though not in degree, in the pleasures and pains
-of others, which I get at the knowledge of and sympathise with in
-the same way. There is then no exclusive ground of self-interest,
-incompatible with sympathy, and rendering it a chimera; self-love
-and sympathy both rest on the same general ground of reason, of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_407'>407</span>imagination, and of common sense.—It may be said, that my own
-future interests have a reality beyond the mere idea. So have the
-interests of others, and the only question is, whether the sympathy,
-the motive to action, is not equally imaginary in both cases. It may
-be said, that I shall become my future self, but that is no reason why
-I should take a particular interest in it till I do. If a pin pricks me
-in any part of my body, I am instantly apprised of it, and feel an
-interest in removing it; but my future self does not find any means of
-apprising me of its sensations, in which I can feel no interest, except
-from previous apprehension. Lastly, it may be said that I do feel
-an interest in myself and my future welfare, which I do not, and
-cannot feel in that of others. This I grant; but that does not prove
-a metaphysical antecedent self-interest, precluding the possibility of all
-interest in others, (for the social affections are as much a matter of
-fact, as the influence of self-love) but a practical self-interest, arising
-out of habit and circumstances, and more or less consistent with
-other disinterested and humane feelings, according to habit, opinion,
-and circumstances. I love myself better than my neighbour,
-for the same reason (and for no other) that I love my child better
-than a stranger’s—from having my thoughts more fixed upon its
-welfare, my time more taken up in providing for it, and from my
-knowing better by experience, what its wants and wishes are. People
-have accounted for natural affection as an innate idea, as they have
-for self-love. According to the metaphysical doctrine of selfishness,
-my own child or a stranger’s, and every one else, are equally and
-perfectly indifferent to me, as much as if they were mere machines.
-As to a paramount universal abstract notion of personal identity,
-impelling and overruling all my actions, thoughts, feelings, etc. to one
-sole object, and centre of self-interest, there is no such thing in nature.
-It requires almost as much pains and discipline, to make us attentive
-to our own real and permanent happiness, as to that of others. Is it
-not the constant theme of moralists and divines, that man is the sport
-of impulse, and the creature of habit? I would ask, whether the
-convivialist is deterred from indulging in his love of the bottle, by
-any consideration of the ruin of his health or business? Is the
-debauchee restrained in the career of his passions, any more by
-reflecting on the disgrace or probable diseases he is bringing on
-himself, than on the injury he does to others? It would be as hard
-a task to make the spendthrift prudent, as the miser generous. Man
-is governed by his passions, and not by his interest.—The selfish
-theory is founded on mixing up vulgar prejudices, and scholastic distinctions;
-and by being insisted on, tends to debase the mind, and
-not at all promote the cause of truth.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_408'>408</span>I do not think I should illustrate the foregoing reasoning so well
-by anything I could add on the subject, as by relating the manner in
-which it first struck me. I remember I had been reading a speech
-which Mirabaud (the author of the work, called the System of
-Nature) has put into the mouth of a supposed infidel at the day of
-Judgment; and was afterwards led on by some means or other, to
-consider the question, whether it could properly be said to be an act
-of virtue in any one to sacrifice his own final happiness to that of any
-other person, or number of persons, if it were possible for the one
-ever to be made the price of the other. Suppose it be my own
-case—that it were in my power to save twenty other persons, by
-voluntarily consenting to suffer for them, why should I not do a
-generous thing, and never trouble myself about what might be the
-consequences to myself thousands of years hence? Now the reason,
-I thought, why a man should prefer his own future welfare to that of
-others, was, that he has a necessary, or abstract interest in the one,
-which he cannot have in the other, and this again is the consequence
-of his being always the same individual, of his continued identity with
-himself. The distinction is this, that however insensible I may be to
-my own interest at any future period, yet when the time comes, I
-shall feel very differently about it. I shall then judge of it from the
-actual impression of the object, that is, truly and certainly; and as I
-shall still be conscious of my past feelings, and shall bitterly repent
-my own folly and insensibility, I ought, as a rational agent, to be
-determined now by what I shall then wish I had done, when I shall
-feel the consequences of my actions most deeply and sensibly. It is
-this continued consciousness of my own feelings which gives me an
-immediate interest in whatever relates to my future welfare, and
-makes me at all times accountable to myself for my own conduct.
-As therefore this consciousness will be renewed in me after death, if
-I exist again at all—But stop——As I must be conscious of my past
-feelings to be myself, and as this conscious being will be myself, how,
-if that consciousness should be transferred to some other being?
-How am I to know that I am not imposed upon by a false claim of
-identity? But that is impossible, because I shall have no other self
-than that which arises from this very consciousness. Why then, if
-so, this self may be multiplied in as many different beings as the
-Deity may think proper to endue with the same consciousness, which,
-if it can be renewed by an act of omnipotence in any one instance,
-may clearly be so in a hundred others. Am I to regard all these as
-equally myself? Am I equally interested in the fate of all? Or if I
-must fix upon some one of them in particular as my representative and
-other self, how am I to be determined in my choice?——Here then I
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_409'>409</span>saw an end to my speculations about absolute self-interest and personal
-identity. I saw plainly, that the consciousness of my own feelings,
-which is made the foundation of my continued interest in them, could
-not extend to what had never been, and might never be, that my
-identity with myself must be confined to the connection between my
-past and present being, that with respect to my future feelings and
-interests they could have no communication with, or influence over
-my present feelings and interests, merely because they were future,
-that I shall be hereafter affected by the recollection of my former
-feelings and actions, and my remorse be equally heightened by reflecting
-on my past folly, and late-earned wisdom, whether I am really
-the same thinking being, or have only the same consciousness renewed
-in me; but that to suppose that this remorse can re-act in the reverse
-order on my present feelings, or create an immediate interest in my
-future feelings before it exists, is an express contradiction. For,
-how can this pretended unity of consciousness which is only reflected
-from the past, which makes me so little acquainted with the future,
-that I cannot even tell for a moment how long it will be continued,
-whether it will be entirely interrupted by, or renewed in me after
-death, and which might be multiplied in I don’t know how many
-different beings, and prolonged by complicated sufferings, without my
-being any the wiser for it; how, I ask, can a principle of this sort
-transfuse my present into my future being, and make me as much a
-participator in what does not at all affect me as if it were actually impressed
-upon my senses? I cannot, therefore, have a principle of
-active self-interest arising out of the connexion between my future and
-present being, for no such connexion exists or is possible. I am
-what I am in spite of the future. My feelings, actions, and interests
-are determined by causes already existing and acting, and cannot
-depend on anything else, without a complete transposition of the order
-in which effects follow one another in nature.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In this manner, Sir, may a man learn to distinguish the limits
-which circumscribe his identity with himself, and the frail tenure on
-which he holds his fleeting existence. Here indeed, ‘on this bank
-and shoal of time,’ we give ourselves credit for a few years, and so
-far make sure of our continued identity—as far as we can see the
-horizon before us, while the same busy scene exists, while the same
-objects, passions, and pursuits engross our attention, we seem to grasp
-the realities of things; they are incorporated with our imagination
-and take hold of our affections, and we cannot doubt of our interest
-in them. Farther than this, we do not go with the same confidence;
-the indistinctness of another state of being takes away its reality, and
-we lose the abstract idea of self for want of objects to attach it to. But
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_410'>410</span>the reasoning is the same in both cases. The next year, the
-next hour, the next moment is but a creation of the mind; in all
-that we hope or fear, love or hate, in all that is nearest and dearest
-to us, we but mistake the strength of illusion for certainty, and follow
-the mimic shews of things and catch at a shadow and live in a
-waking dream. Everything before us exists in an ideal world.
-The future is a blank and dreary void, like sleep or death, till the
-imagination brooding over it with wings outspread, impregnates it
-with life and motion. The forms and colours it assumes are but
-the pictures reflected on the eye of fancy, the unreal mockeries
-of future events. The solid fabric of time and nature moves on,
-but the future always flies before it. The present moment stands on
-the brink of nothing. We cannot pass the dread abyss, or make a
-broad and beaten way over it, or construct a real interest in it, or
-identify ourselves with what is not, or have a being, sense, and
-motion, where there are none. Our interest in the future, our
-identity with it, cannot be substantial; that self which we project
-before us into it is like a shadow in the water, a bubble of the brain.
-In becoming the blind and servile drudges of self-interest, we bow
-down before an idol of our own making, and are spell-bound by a
-name. Those objects to which we are most attached, make no part
-of our present sensations or real existence; they are fashioned out of
-nothing, and rivetted to our self-love by the force of a reasoning
-imagination, (the privilege of our intellectual nature)—and it is the
-same faculty that carries us out of ourselves as well as beyond
-the present moment, that pictures the thoughts, passions and feelings
-of others to us, and interests us in them, that clothes the whole
-possible world with a borrowed reality, that breathes into all other
-forms the breath of life, and endows our sympathies with vital
-warmth, and diffuses the soul of morality through all the relations and
-sentiments of our social being.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Such, Sir, is the metaphysical discovery of which I spoke; and
-which I made many years ago. From that time I felt a certain
-weight and tightness about my heart taken off, and cheerful and
-confident thoughts springing up in the place of anxious fears and sad
-forebodings. The plant I had sown and watered with my tears,
-grew under my eye; and the air about it was wholesome and
-pleasant. For this cause it is, that I have gone on little discomposed by
-other things, by good or adverse fortune, by good or ill report, more
-hurt by public disappointments than my own, and not thrown into
-the hot or cold fits of a tertian ague; as the Edinburgh or Quarterly
-Review damps or raises the opinion of the town in my favour. I
-have some love of fame, of the fame of a Pascal, a Leibnitz, or a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_411'>411</span>Berkeley (none at all of popularity) and would rather that a single
-inquirer after truth should pronounce my name, after I am dead, with
-the same feelings that I have thought of theirs, than be puffed in all
-the newspapers, and praised in all the reviews, while I am living.
-I myself have been a thinker; and I cannot but believe that there are
-and will be others, like me. If the few and scattered sparks of truth,
-which I have been at so much pains to collect, should still be kept
-alive in the minds of such persons, and not entirely die with me, I
-shall be satisfied.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>I am, Sir,</div>
- <div class='line in12'>Yours, etc.</div>
- <div class='line in24'><span class='sc'>William Hazlitt</span>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div>End of <span class='sc'>A Letter to William Gifford</span>.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_415'>415</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>NOTES</h2>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>THE ROUND TABLE</h3>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>ON THE LOVE OF LIFE</h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>This essay formed No. 3 of the Round Table series, the first two having been
-contributed by Leigh Hunt. To numbers 2, 3, 4 the following motto was prefixed:
-‘<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Sociali fœdere mensa.</span> <em>Milton.</em> A Table in a social compact joined.’</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt>PAGE</dt>
- <dd>&nbsp;
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_1'>1</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>That sage.</em> Hazlitt perhaps refers to Bacon’s lines—
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘What then remains, but that we still should cry</div>
- <div class='line'>For being born, or being born, to die?’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>which are taken from an epigram in the Greek Anthology.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_2'>2</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>The school-boy</em>,’ says <em>Addison.</em> See <cite>The Spectator</cite>, No. 93.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Hope and fantastic expectations</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> Jeremy Taylor’s <cite>Holy
- Dying</cite>, Chap. i. § 3, par. 4.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>An ounce of sweet</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> ‘A dram of sweete is worth a pound of
- sowre.’ <cite>The Faerie Queene</cite>, Book <span class='fss'>I.</span> Canto iii. 30.
- This line formed the motto of Leigh Hunt’s <cite>Indicator</cite>.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_3'>3</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>And that must end us</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Paradise Lost</cite>, <span
- class='fss'>II.</span> 145–151. In <cite>The Examiner</cite> Hazlitt publishes the
- following passage as a note to this quotation: ‘Many persons have wondered how Bonaparte
- was able to survive the shock of that tremendous height of power from which he fell. But
- it was that very height which still rivetted his backward gaze, and made it impossible
- for him to take his eye from it, more than from a hideous spectre. The sun of Austerlitz
- still rose upon his imagination, and could not set. The huge fabric of glory which he had
- raised, still “mocked his eyes with air.”<a id='r87' /><a href='#f87'
- class='c012'><sup>[87]</sup></a> He who had felt his existence so
- intensely could not consent to lose it!’
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_4'>4</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Are made desperate</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> Wordsworth’s <cite>Excursion</cite>,
- Book <span class='fss'>VI.</span> The following note is appended to this essay in
- <cite>The Examiner</cite>: ‘It is proper to notice that an extract from this article
- formerly appeared in another publication. A series of Criticisms on the principal English
- Poets will shortly be commenced, and till concluded, will appear alternately with the
- other subjects of the Round Table.’ The publication referred to was <cite>The Morning
- Chronicle</cite> for September 4, 1813, where, under the heading ‘Common Places,’ the
- substance of the paragraph beginning ‘The love of life is, in general, the effect,’ and
- the following paragraph will be found. The plan for criticisms of the English Poets was
- not adhered to. Hazlitt shortly afterwards (1818) delivered a course of Lectures on the
- English Poets which was published in the same year.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_416'>416</span>
- <h4 class='c022'>ON CLASSICAL EDUCATION</h4>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>This essay formed the greater part of No. 7 of the Round Table series. The
-first three paragraphs are from one of Hazlitt’s ‘Common Places’ in <cite>The Morning
-Chronicle</cite>, September 25, 1813.</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt>PAGE</dt>
- <dd>&nbsp;
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_4'>4</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>A discipline of humanity.</em>’ Bacon’s <cite>Essays</cite>, Of Marriage and Single
- Life.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Still green with bays</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> Pope’s <cite>Essay on
- Criticism</cite>, 181–188.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_5'>5</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>A celebrated political writer.</em> Probably Cobbett, of whom Hazlitt says in another
- place: ‘He is a self-taught man, and has the faults as well as excellences of that class
- of persons in their most striking and glaring excess.’ (<cite>Table Talk</cite>,
- Character of Cobbett.)
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_6'>6</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>The world is too much with us</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> Misquoted from Wordsworth’s
- Sonnet.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Falstaff’s reasoning about honour.</em> See <cite>1 Henry IV.</cite> Act <span
- class='fss'>V.</span> Scene 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>They that are whole</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>St. Matthew</cite>, ix. 12.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>In <cite>The Examiner</cite> this essay concluded with the following passage: ‘We do not
- think a classical education proper for women. It may pervert their minds, but it cannot
- elevate them. It has been asked, Why a woman should not learn the dead languages as well
- as the modern ones? For this plain reason, that the one are still spoken, and have
- immediate associations connected with them, and the other not. A woman may have a lover
- who is a Frenchman, or an Italian, or a Spaniard; and it is well to be provided against
- every contingency in that way. But what possible interest can she feel in those
- old-fashioned persons, the Greeks and Romans, or in what was done two thousand years ago?
- A modern widow would doubtless prefer Signor Tramezzani<a id='r88' /><a href='#f88'
- class='c012'><sup>[88]</sup></a> to Æneas, and Mr. Conway would be a
- formidable rival to Paris. No young lady in our days, in conceiving an idea of Apollo,
- can go a step beyond the image of her favourite poet: nor do we wonder that our old
- friend, the Prince Regent, passes for a perfect Adonis in the circles of beauty and
- fashion. Women in general have no ideas, except personal ones. They are mere egotists.
- They have no passion for truth, nor any love of what is purely ideal. They hate to think,
- and they hate every one who seems to think of anything but themselves. Everything is to
- them a perfect nonentity which does not touch their senses, their vanity, or their
- interest. Their poetry, their criticism, their politics, their morality, and their
- divinity, are downright affectation. That line in Milton is very striking—
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“He for God only, she for God in him.”<a id='r89' /><a href='#f89' class='c012'><sup>[89]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><span class='pageno' id='Page_417'>417</span>Such is the order of nature and providence; and we should be sorry to see any
- fantastic improvements on it. Women are what they were meant to be; and we wish for no
- alteration in their bodies or their minds. They are the creatures of the circumstances in
- which they are placed, of sense, of sympathy and habit. They are exquisitely susceptible
- of the passive impressions of things: but to form an idea of pure understanding or
- imagination, to feel an interest in <em>the true</em> and <em>the good</em> beyond
- themselves, requires an effort of which they are incapable. They want principle, except
- that which consists in an adherence to established custom; and this is the reason of the
- severe laws which have been set up as a barrier against every infringement of decorum and
- propriety in women. It has been observed by an ingenious writer of the present day, that
- women want imagination. This requires explanation. They have less of that imagination
- which depends on intensity of passion, on the accumulation of ideas and feelings round
- one object, on bringing all nature and all art to bear on a particular purpose, on
- continuity and comprehension of mind; but for the same reason, they have more fancy, that
- is greater flexibility of mind, and can more readily vary and separate their ideas at
- pleasure. The reason of that greater presence of mind which has been remarked in women
- is, that they are less in the habit of speculating on what is best to be done, and the
- first suggestion is decisive. The writer of this article confesses that he never met with
- any woman who could reason, and with but one reasonable woman. There is no instance of a
- woman having been a great mathematician or metaphysician or poet or painter: but they can
- dance and sing and act and write novels and fall in love, which last quality alone makes
- more than angels of them. Women are no judges of the characters of men, except <em>as
- men</em>. They have no real respect for men, or they never respect them for those
- qualities, for which they are respected by men. They in fact regard all such qualities as
- interfering with their own pretensions, and creating a jurisdiction different from their
- own. Women naturally wish to have their favourites all to themselves, and flatter their
- weaknesses to make them more dependent on their own good opinion, which, they think, is
- all that they want. We have, indeed, seen instances of men, equally respectable and
- amiable, equally admired by the women and esteemed by the men, but who have been ruined
- by an excess of virtues and accomplishments.’ Leigh Hunt replied to these remarks in the
- following number of the Round Table series (February 19, 1815), where he makes
- interesting reference to Hazlitt’s appearance and powers.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>ON THE TATLER</h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>This essay formed No. 10 of the Round Table series. The substance of it was
-repeated by Hazlitt in his volume of <cite>Lectures on the English Comic Writers</cite> (1819).
-(See the Lecture on ‘The Periodical Essayists.’)</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt>PAGE</dt>
- <dd>&nbsp;
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_7'>7</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>The disastrous strokes which his youth suffered.</em>’ ‘Some distressful stroke that
- my youth suffered.’ <cite>Othello</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> Scene 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>He dwells with a secret satisfaction.</em> <cite>The Tatler</cite>, No. 107.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>The club at the ‘Trumpet.’</em> <cite>The Tatler</cite>, No. 132.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>The cavalcade of the justice</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>The Tatler</cite>, No. 86.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>The upholsterer and his companions.</em> See <cite>The Tatler</cite>, Nos. 155, 160,
- and 178.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>A burlesque copy of verses.</em> <cite>The Tatler</cite>, No. 238. The verses are by
- Swift.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_8'>8</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Betterton and Mrs. Oldfield.</em> See p. 157. Betterton is frequently mentioned in
- <cite>The Tatler</cite>. See especially No. 167.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Mr. Penkethman and Mr. Bullock.</em> See <cite>The Tatler</cite>, No. 88, and p. 157
- of this volume.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>The first sprightly runnings.</em>’ Dryden’s <cite>Aurengzebe</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>IV.</span> Scene 1.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_9'>9</a>.</dt>
- <dd><cite>The Court of Honour.</cite> Addison, in <cite>The Tatler</cite>, No. 250, created
- the Court of Honour. He and Steele together wrote the later papers (Nos. 253, 256, 259,
- 262, 265) in which the proceedings of the Court are recorded.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><cite>The Personification of Musical Instruments.</cite> <cite>The Spectator</cite>, Nos.
- 153 and 157.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>Note. This note is by Leigh Hunt. The authorship of the anonymous paper (<cite>The
- Spectator</cite>, No. 95) is uncertain.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>The account of the two sisters.</em> <cite>The Tatler</cite>, No. 151.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>The married lady.</em> <cite>The Tatler</cite>, No. 104.
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_418'>418</span></div>
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_9'>9</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>The lover and his mistress.</em> <cite>The Tatler</cite>, No. 94.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>The bridegroom.</em> <cite>The Tatler</cite>, No. 82.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Mr. Eustace and his wife.</em> <cite>The Tatler</cite>, No. 172.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>The fine dream.</em> <cite>The Tatler</cite>, No. 117.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Mandeville’s sarcasm.</em> Bernard Mandeville (<em>d.</em> 1733), author of <cite>The
- Fable of the Bees</cite>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Westminster Abbey.</em> <cite>The Spectator</cite>, No. 26.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Royal Exchange.</em> <cite>The Spectator</cite>, No. 69.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>The best criticism.</em> <cite>The Spectator</cite>, No. 226.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_10'>10</a>.</dt>
- <dd>Note. <em>An original copy of the ‘Tatler.’</em> The octavo edition of 1710–11.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>ON MODERN COMEDY</h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>This essay did not form one of the Round Table series, but was published in <cite>The
-Examiner</cite> for August 20, 1815, under the heading ‘Theatrical Examiner.’ It was
-substantially repeated in the <cite>Lectures on the English Comic Writers</cite> (Lecture <span class='fss'>VIII.</span>,
-‘on the Comic Writers of the Last Century’), and was republished <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">verbatim</span></i> in the
-posthumous volume entitled <cite>Criticisms and Dramatic Essays on the English Stage</cite>
-(1851). The essay is practically a reprint of the first of two letters which Hazlitt
-wrote to <cite>The Morning Chronicle</cite> (September 25 and October 15, 1813). The second
-of these letters has not been republished.</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt>PAGE</dt>
- <dd>&nbsp;
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_10'>10</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Where it must live, or have no life at all.</em>’ <cite>Othello</cite>, Act. <span
- class='fss'>II.</span> Scene 4.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_11'>11</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>See ourselves as others see us.</em>’ Burns, ‘To a Louse.’
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Wart.</em> He means Shadow. See <cite>2 Henry IV.</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>III.</span> Scene 2.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_12'>12</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Lovelace</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> Nearly all these characters are discussed in the
- <cite>English Comic Writers</cite>. Sparkish is in Wycherley’s <cite>Country Wife</cite>,
- Lord Foppington in Vanbrugh’s <cite>Relapse</cite>, Millamant in Congreve’s <cite>Way of
- the World</cite>, Sir Sampson Legend in Congreve’s <cite>Love for Love</cite>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>We cannot expect</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> This paragraph appeared originally in
- <cite>The Morning Chronicle</cite>, October 15, 1813.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_13'>13</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>That sevenfold fence.</em>’ ‘The seven-fold shield of Ajax cannot keep the battery
- from my heart.’ <cite>Antony and Cleopatra</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> Scene
- 14. This passage is taken by Hazlitt from his own <cite>Reply to Malthus</cite> (1807).
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Mr. Smirk, you are a brisk man.</em>’ Foote’s <cite>Minor</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>II.</span>
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Aristotle.</em> In the <em>Poetics</em>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Warm hearts of flesh and blood</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> Quoted, with omissions and
- variations, from a passage in Burke’s <cite>Reflections on the Revolution in
- France</cite> (<cite>Select Works</cite>, ed. Payne, ii. 101).
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_14'>14</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Men’s minds are parcel of their fortunes.</em>’ <cite>Antony and Cleopatra</cite>,
- Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> Scene 13.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>ON MR. KEAN’S IAGO</h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>Republished with a few variations from <cite>The Examiner</cite> of July 24, 1814. Hazlitt
-afterwards published the original article in <cite>A View of the English Stage</cite> (1818), and
-borrowed from it in <cite>Characters of Shakespear’s Plays</cite> (See <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">ante</span></i>, pp. 206–7).</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt>PAGE</dt>
- <dd>&nbsp;
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_14'>14</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>A contemporary critic.</em> This was Hazlitt himself who made this criticism of Kean
- in an article in <cite>The Morning Chronicle</cite> (May 9, 1814), reprinted in <cite>A
- View of the English Stage</cite>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Hedged in with the divinity of kings.</em>’ From <cite>Hamlet</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>IV.</span> Scene 5.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_15'>15</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Play the dog</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>3 Henry VI.</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>V.</span> Scene 6.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_16'>16</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>His cue is villainous melancholy</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>King Lear</cite>,
- Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> Scene 2.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_419'>419</span>
- <h4 class='c022'>ON THE LOVE OF THE COUNTRY</h4>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>This essay was one of a series called Common-places (No. <span class='fss'>III.</span>) and appeared in
-<cite>The Examiner</cite> on November 27, 1814, before the Round Table series commenced.
-It was not, therefore, addressed, as it purports to be, ‘to the editor of the “Round
-Table.”’ The greater part of it was repeated in the <cite>Lectures on the English Poets</cite>
-(1818) at the end of Lecture <span class='fss'>V.</span> on Thomson and Cowper.</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt>PAGE</dt>
- <dd>&nbsp;
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_17'>17</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Rousseau in his ‘Confessions.’</em> Partie I. Livre <span class='fss'>III.</span>
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_18'>18</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>The minstrel.</em> See Beattie’s <cite>Minstrel</cite>, Book <span
- class='fss'>I.</span> st. 9.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_20'>20</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>A farewell sweet.</em>’
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘If chance the radiant sun, with farewell sweet,</div>
- <div class='line'>Extend his evening beam,’ etc.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in28'><cite>Paradise Lost</cite>, <span class='fss'>II.</span> 492.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>To me the meanest flower</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> Wordsworth’s Ode,
- <cite>Intimations of Immortality</cite>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Nature did ne’er betray</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> Wordsworth’s <cite>Lines composed a
- few miles above Tintern Abbey</cite>.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_21'>21</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Or from the mountain’s sides.</em>’ Collins’s <cite>Ode to Evening</cite>, stanzas 9
- and 10.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>ON POSTHUMOUS FAME</h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>This essay is not one of the Round Table series. It appeared in <cite>The Examiner</cite> on
-May 22, 1814.</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt>PAGE</dt>
- <dd>&nbsp;
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_22'>22</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Blessings be with them</em>’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> Wordsworth’s <cite>Personal
- Talk</cite>, stanza 4.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Nor sometimes forget</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Paradise Lost</cite>, <span
- class='fss'>III.</span> 33 <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">et seq.</span></i>
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>Note. A part of the passage here referred to (from <cite>The Reason of Church Government
- urged against Prelacy</cite>) is quoted by Hazlitt in his <cite>Lectures on the English
- Poets</cite> (on Shakspeare and Milton).
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_23'>23</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Famous poets’ wit.</em>’ See <cite>The Faerie Queene, Verses addressed by the
- author</cite>, No. 2. ‘<em>Have not the poems of Homer</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>The
- Advancement of Learning</cite>, First Book, <span class='fss'>VIII.</span> 6.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Because on Earth</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> See Dante’s <cite>Inferno</cite>, Canto
- iv. Cf. ‘On Fames eternall beadroll worthie to be fyled.’ <cite>The Faerie Queene</cite>,
- Book <span class='fss'>IV.</span> Canto ii. st. 32.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Every variety of untried being.</em>’
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Through what variety of untried being,</div>
- <div class='line'>Through what new scenes and changes must we pass!’</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in32'>Addison’s <cite>Cato</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>V.</span> Scene 1.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_24'>24</a>.</dt>
- <dd>Note. ‘<em>Oh! for my sake</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> Sonnet No. <span
- class='fss'>III.</span> ‘<em>Desiring this man’s art</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> Sonnet No.
- 29.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>ON HOGARTH’S ‘<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">MARRIAGE À LA MODE</span>’</h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>This essay (from <cite>The Examiner</cite>, June 5, 1814) and the next one (June 19,
-1814) continuing the same subject, were (in substance) republished in the <cite>English
-Comic Writers</cite> (see the Lecture <span class='fss'>VII.</span> on the works of Hogarth) and also in <cite>Sketches
-of the Principal Picture-Galleries in England</cite>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> (1824).</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt>PAGE</dt>
- <dd>&nbsp;
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_25'>25</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>The late collection.</em> In 1814.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Of amber-lidded snuff-box.</em>’ Pope’s <cite>Rape of the Lock</cite>, <span
- class='fss'>IV.</span> 123.
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_420'>420</span></div>
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_26'>26</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>A person, and a smooth dispose</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Othello</cite>, Act
- <span class='fss'>I.</span> Scene 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Vice loses half its evil in losing all its grossness.</em>’ Burke’s
- <cite>Reflections on the Revolution in France</cite> (<cite>Select Works</cite>, ed.
- Payne, ii. 89).
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>THE SUBJECT CONTINUED</h4>
-
- <dl class='dl_1 c004'>
- <dt><a href='#Page_28'>28</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>What Fielding says.</em> See <cite>Tom Jones</cite>, Book <span
- class='fss'>IV.</span> Chap. i.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_30'>30</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>All the mutually reflected charities.</em>’ Burke’s <cite>Reflections on the
- Revolution in France</cite> (<cite>Select Works</cite>, ed. Payne, ii. 40).
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Frequent and full</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> See <cite>Paradise Lost</cite>, <span
- class='fss'>III.</span> 795–797.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_31'>31</a>.</dt>
- <dd>Note. <em>The ‘Reflector.’</em> For 1811. The essay is included in <cite>Poems, Plays and
- Miscellaneous Essays of Charles Lamb</cite> (ed. Ainger).
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>ON MILTON’S LYCIDAS</h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>No. 15 of the Round Table series.</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt>PAGE</dt>
- <dd>&nbsp;
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_31'>31</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>At last he rose</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <em>Lycidas</em>, 192–193.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Dr. Johnson.</em> See his Life of Milton (<cite>Works</cite>, Oxford ed., vii. 119).
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Most musical, most melancholy.</em>’ <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Il Penseroso</span></i>, l. 62.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>With eager thought warbling his Doric lay.</em>’ <em>Lycidas</em>, l. 189.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_32'>32</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Together both</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <em>Lycidas</em>, ll. 25 <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">et seq.</span></i>
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Oh fountain Arethuse</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <em>Lycidas</em>, ll. 85 <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">et
- seq.</span></i>
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_33'>33</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Like one that had been led astray</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Il
- Penseroso</span></i>, ll. 69–70.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Next Camus</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <em>Lycidas</em>, ll. 103 <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">et seq.</span></i>
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Has been found fault with.</em> By Dr. Johnson in his Life of Milton
- (<cite>Works</cite>, Oxford ed., vii. 120).
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Camoens, who, in his ‘Lusiad.’</em> See <cite>The Lusiads</cite>, Canto ii. stanzas
- 56 <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">et seq.</span></i>
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_34'>34</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>The muses in a ring</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Il Penseroso</span></i>, ll. 47–48.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Have sight of Proteus</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> Wordsworth’s Sonnet, ‘The world is
- too much with us.’
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Return, Alphaeus</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <em>Lycidas</em>, ll. 132 <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">et
- seq.</span></i>
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_35'>35</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Dr. Johnson.</em> Johnson does not seem to have been offended by the dolphins in
- particular.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>The picture by Barry.</em> ‘The triumph of the Thames,’ number 4 of the six pictures
- painted by James Barry (1741–1806) for the Society of Arts. Johnson’s friend, Dr. Charles
- Burney (1726–1814) figures as one of the renowned dead.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Here’s flowers for you</em>’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Winter’s Tale</cite>, Act.
- <span class='fss'>IV.</span> Scene 4.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_36'>36</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Dr. Johnson’s ‘general remark</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> See his Life of Milton
- (<cite>Works</cite>, Oxford ed., vii. 119, 131), and Boswell’s <cite>Life of
- Johnson</cite> (ed. G. B. Hill), iv. 305.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>ON MILTON’S VERSIFICATION</h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>No. 16 of the Round Table series. Hazlitt drew largely on this essay for his
-lecture on Shakspeare and Milton. See <cite>Lectures on the English Poets</cite>.</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt>PAGE</dt>
- <dd>&nbsp;
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_37'>37</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Makes Ossa like a wart.</em>’ <cite>Hamlet</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>V.</span>
- Scene 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Sad task, yet argument</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> Quoted, with omissions, from
- <cite>Paradise Lost</cite>, <span class='fss'>IX.</span> 13–45.
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_421'>421</span></div>
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_37'>37</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Him followed Rimmon</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Paradise Lost</cite>, <span
- class='fss'>I.</span> 467–469.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>As when a vulture</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Paradise Lost</cite>, <span
- class='fss'>III.</span> 431–439.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_38'>38</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>It has been said</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> Hazlitt probably refers to Coleridge. See
- his <cite>Lectures on Shakspeare</cite> (Bell’s ed., p. 526).
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>He soon saw within ken</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Paradise Lost</cite>, <span
- class='fss'>III.</span> 621–634.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_39'>39</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Dr. Johnson.</em> Hazlitt somewhat exaggerates Johnson’s strictures on Milton. See
- <cite>The Rambler</cite>, Nos. 86, 88, and 90.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>His hand was known</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Paradise Lost</cite>, <span
- class='fss'>I.</span> 732–747.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>But chief the spacious hall</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Paradise Lost</cite>,
- <span class='fss'>I.</span> 762–788. In <cite>The Examiner</cite> Hazlitt has a note to
- the words ‘brush’d with the hiss of rustling wings,’ pointing out that it was one of Dr.
- Johnson’s speculations, that all imitative sound is merely fanciful. He refers probably
- to <cite>The Rambler</cite>, No. 94.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_40'>40</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Round he surveys</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Paradise Lost</cite>, <span
- class='fss'>III.</span> 555–567.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>In many a winding bout</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">L’Allegro</span></cite>, ll.
- 139–140.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_41'>41</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>The hidden soul of harmony.</em>’ <cite><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">L’Allegro</span></cite>, l. 144.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>Note. Hazlitt quoted these couplets again in his <cite>Lectures on the English
- Poets</cite>. See Lecture <span class='fss'>IV.</span> on Dryden and Pope.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>ON MANNER</h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>This essay is compounded of two papers in the Round Table series, Nos. 17 and
-<a href='#Page_18'>18</a>.| Hazlitt, however, omitted the greater part of No. 18, at the beginning of
-which he discussed Dryden’s version of <cite>The Flower and the Leaf</cite>. No. 18 was
-published in <cite>Winterslow</cite> (1839) under the title of <cite>Matter and Manner</cite>.</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt>PAGE</dt>
- <dd>&nbsp;
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_42'>42</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Says Lord Chesterfield.</em> ‘Observe the looks and countenances of those who speak,
- which is often a surer way of discovering the truth than what they say.’ <cite>Letters to
- his Son</cite>, No. cxxx.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Than his sentiments.</em> In <cite>The Examiner</cite> appears the following note on
- this passage: ‘We find persons who write what may be called an <em>impracticable</em>
- style; and their ideas are just as impracticable. They have as little tact of what is
- going on in the world as of the habitual meaning of words. Other writers betray their
- natural disposition by affectation, dryness, or levity of style. Style is the adaptation
- of words to things. Dr. Johnson had no style, that is, no scale of words answering to the
- differences of his subject. He always translated his ideas into the highest and most
- imposing form of expression, or more properly, into Latin words with English
- terminations. Goldsmith said to him, “If you had to write a fable, and to introduce
- little fishes speaking, you would make them talk like great whales.” It is a satire on
- this kind of taste that the most ignorant pretenders are in general what is generally
- understood by the finest writers. Women generally write a good style, because they
- express themselves according to the impression which things make upon them, without the
- affectation of authorship. They have besides more sense of propriety than men.’ For the
- story of Goldsmith see Boswell’s <cite>Life of Johnson</cite> (ed. G. B. Hill), ii. 231.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_43'>43</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>One of the most pleasant</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> It is evident from a passage in
- <cite>Table Talk</cite> (on Coffee-House Politicians) that this friend is Leigh Hunt, and
- that ‘another friend’ is Lamb.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>As dry as the remainder biscuit</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>As You Like
- It</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> Scene 7.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Learning is often</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>2 Henry IV.</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>IV.</span> Scene 3.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_44'>44</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Lord Chesterfield’s character of the Duke of Marlborough.</em> <cite>Letters to his
- Son</cite>, No. clxviii.
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_422'>422</span></div>
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_45'>45</a>.</dt>
- <dd>Note 1. It appears from a <span class='fss'>MS.</span> note in a copy of the 1817 edition
- that Hazlitt here refers to Lord Castlereagh.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>The greatest man</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> Napoleon. Cf. <cite>Table Talk</cite> (on
- Great and Little Things) and <cite>Life of Napoleon</cite>, Chap. lvii.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>Note 2. <em>A sonnet to the King.</em> This must be the sonnet beginning—
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Now that all hearts are glad, all faces bright’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>to which Hazlitt referred again in <cite>Political Essays</cite> (‘Illustrations of
- <cite>The Times</cite> Newspaper’). Wordsworth’s attack on a set of gipsies was in the
- poem entitled ‘Gipsies’ (1807).
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>In a wise passiveness.</em>’ <cite>Expostulation and Reply</cite> (1798).
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>In the ‘Excursion’.</em> Book <span class='fss'>VIII.</span>
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>‘They are a grotesque ornament,’ etc.</em> ‘Nobility is a graceful ornament to the
- civil order.’ Burke’s <cite>Reflections on the Revolution in France</cite> (<cite>Select
- Works</cite>, ed. Payne, ii. 164).
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>This is enough.</em> In <cite>The Examiner</cite> Hazlitt adds: ‘We really have a
- very great contempt for any one who differs from us on this point.’
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_46'>46</a>.</dt>
- <dd><cite>The Story of the glass-man.</cite> The Barber’s story of his Fifth Brother.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>That manner is everything.</em> ‘Sheer impudence answers almost the same purpose.
- “Those impenetrable whiskers have confronted flames.” Many persons, by looking big and
- talking loud, make their way through the world without any one good quality. We have here
- said nothing of mere personal qualifications, which are another set-off against sterling
- merit. Fielding was of opinion that “the more solid pretensions of virtue and
- understanding vanish before perfect beauty.” “A certain lady of a manor” (says <cite>Don
- Quixote</cite><a id='r90' /><a href='#f90' style='text-decoration: none;
- '><sup>[90]</sup></a> in defence of his attachment to <em>Dulcinea</em>, which however
- was quite of the Platonic kind), “had cast the eyes of affection on a certain squat,
- brawny lay-brother of a neighbouring monastery, to whom she was lavish of her favours.
- The head of the order remonstrated with her on this preference shown to one whom he
- represented as a very low, ignorant fellow, and set forth the superior pretensions of
- himself, and his more learned brethren. The lady having heard him to an end made answer:
- All that you have said may be very true; but know, that in those points which I admire,
- Brother Chrysostom is as great a philosopher, nay greater than Aristotle himself!” So the
- <cite>Wife of Bath</cite>:<a id='r91' /><a href='#f91' style='text-decoration: none;
- '><sup>[91]</sup></a>—
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“To church was mine husband borne on the morrow</div>
- <div class='line'>With neighbours that for him maden sorrow,</div>
- <div class='line'>And Jenkin our clerk was one of tho:</div>
- <div class='line'>As help me God, when that I saw him go</div>
- <div class='line'>After the bier, methought he had a pair</div>
- <div class='line'>Of legs and feet, so clean and fair,</div>
- <div class='line'>That all my heart I gave unto his hold.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>“All which, though we most potently believe, yet we hold it not honesty to have it thus
- set down.”’<a id='r92' /><a href='#f92' style='text-decoration: none;
- '><sup>[92]</sup></a>—Note by Hazlitt in <cite>The Examiner</cite>, September 3, 1815.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>Note. <em>Sir Roger de Coverley.</em> <cite>The Spectator</cite>, No. 130.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_47'>47</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>The successful experiment.</em> See <cite>Peregrine Pickle</cite>, Chap, lxxxvii.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_423'>423</span>
- <h4 class='c022'>ON THE TENDENCY OF SECTS</h4>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>No. 19 of the Round Table series.</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt>PAGE</dt>
- <dd>&nbsp;
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_49'>49</a>.</dt>
- <dd>Note 1. The <cite>Freedom of the Will</cite> of Jonathan Edwards (1703–1758) was
- published in 1754. Edwards was, of course, an American, as Flower reminded Hazlitt in his
- letter referred to below (49, note 2).
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Hid from ages.</em>’ <cite>Colossians</cite>, i. 26.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>Note 2. Benjamin Flower, in a reply which he wrote to this essay (<cite>The
- Examiner</cite>, October 8, 1815), pointed out the ‘phenomenon’ of a Quaker poet
- ‘appeared about thirty years since, Mr. Scott of Amwell, whose volume of poetry obtained
- the marked approbation of our acknowledged best critics.’ Johnson said of John Scott of
- Amwell’s (1730–1783) <cite>Elegies</cite>, ‘they are very well; but such as twenty people
- might write’ (Boswell’s <cite>Life of Johnson</cite>, ed. G. B. Hill, ii. 351). Another
- correspondent, signing himself ‘B. B.,’ wrote a letter to <cite>The Examiner</cite>
- (September 24, 1815), protesting against Hazlitt’s sketch of Quakerism. This was no doubt
- Bernard Barton (1784–1849), another Quaker poet, and afterwards the friend of Lamb.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_50'>50</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>There is some soul of goodness</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Henry V.</cite>, Act
- <span class='fss'>IV.</span> Scene 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Evil communications</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>1 Corinthians</cite>, xv. 33.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>ON JOHN BUNCLE</h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>No. 20 of the Round Table series.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><cite>The Life of John Buncle, Esq.</cite>, by Thomas (not John) Amory (1691?-1788), was
-published in two volumes, 1756–1766. A new edition in three volumes was
-published in 1825, very likely on Hazlitt’s recommendation. See <cite>Memoirs of
-William Hazlitt</cite>, ii. 198. A quotation from the present essay faces the title-page
-of the new edition (vol. i.). A volume containing the most readable parts of the
-book, and happily entitled ‘The Spirit of Buncle,’ was published in 1823. The
-book was a great favourite of Lamb’s as well as of Hazlitt’s.</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt>PAGE</dt>
- <dd>&nbsp;
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_52'>52</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Botargos.</em> ‘Hard roes of mullet called botargos.’ Urquhart’s Rabelais, <span
- class='fss'>I.</span> xxi.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_53'>53</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Man was made to mourn.</em>’
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Who breathes, must suffer; and who thinks, must mourn.’</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in6'>Prior, <cite>Solomon on the Vanity of the World</cite>, <span class='fss'>III.</span> 240.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>He danced the Hays.</em>
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘I will play on the tabor to the worthies, and let them dance the hay.’</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in32'><cite>Love’s Labour’s Lost</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>V.</span> Scene 1.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>A mistress and a saint in every grove.</em> Goldsmith’s <cite>Traveller</cite>, 152.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Most dolphin-like.</em>’ <cite>Antony and Cleopatra</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>V.</span> Scene 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>And there the antic sits</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Richard II.</cite>, Act
- <span class='fss'>III.</span> Scene 2.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_56'>56</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Philips’s.</em> The Pastorals of Pope and Ambrose Philips (1675?-1749) appeared in
- Tonson’s <cite>Miscellany</cite> (1709).
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Sannazarius.</em> An English translation of the Piscatory Eclogues of Jacopo
- Sannazario was published in 1726.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>What he beautifully calls</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> See <cite>The Complete
- Angler</cite>, Part <span class='fss'>I.</span> Chap. i.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>We accompany them</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>The Complete Angler</cite>, Part
- <span class='fss'>I.</span> Chap. iv. The milkmaid sang ‘Come live with me, and be my
- love.’ That ‘smooth song’ (says Walton) ‘which was made by Kit Marlowe, now at least
- fifty years ago.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><span class='pageno' id='Page_424'>424</span>And the milkmaid’s mother sung an answer to it, which was made by Sir <em>Walter
- Raleigh</em> in his younger days.’
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_57'>57</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Tottenham Cross.</em> The subject of one of the prints.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>Note. <em>His friendship for Cotton.</em> Charles Cotton (1630–1687), the translator of
- Montaigne (1685).
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>Note. <em>Dr. Johnson said.</em> See Mrs. Piozzi’s <cite>Anecdotes</cite>
- (<cite>Johnsonian Miscellanies</cite>, ed. G. B. Hill, i. 332).
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>ON THE CAUSES OF METHODISM</h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>No. 22 of the Round Table series. Leigh Hunt discussed this article in No.
-24 of the series, republished in the 1817 edition of the <cite>Round Table</cite>, and entitled
-‘On the Poetical Character.’ On the subject of Methodism Hunt had already
-spoken his mind in a series of articles in <cite>The Examiner</cite>, which he republished
-in 1809 under the title of <cite>An Attempt to shew the folly and danger of Methodism</cite>.</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt>PAGE</dt>
- <dd>&nbsp;
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_58'>58</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>To sinner it or saint it.</em>’ Pope’s <cite>Moral Essays</cite>, Ep. <span
- class='fss'>II.</span> l. 15.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>The whole need not a physician.</em>’ <cite>St. Matthew</cite>, ix. 12.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Conceit in weakest</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Hamlet</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>III.</span> Scene 4.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_59'>59</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Mawworm.</em> In Isaac Bickerstaffe’s <cite>Hypocrite</cite>, altered from Colley
- Cibber’s <cite>Nonjuror</cite>, which was itself ‘a comedy threshed out of Molière’s
- <cite>Tartuffe</cite>.’ See the Lecture on the Comic Writers of the Last Century in
- <cite>English Comic Writers</cite>. For Oxberry’s acting of the part see <cite>A View of
- the English Stage</cite>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>With sound of bell</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>As You Like It</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>II.</span> Scene 7.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Round fat oily men of God</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> Thomson’s <cite>Castle of
- Indolence</cite>, stanza 69.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>That burning and shining light.</em>’ <cite>St. John</cite>, v. 35.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>Note. ‘<em>And filled up all the mighty void of sense.</em>’ Pope’s <cite>Essay on
- Criticism</cite>, l. 210.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_60'>60</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>The vice</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <em>Hebrews</em>, xii. 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<cite>The Society for the Suppression of Vice.</cite>’ Founded in 1802. Sydney Smith
- criticised its methods in one of his <cite>Edinburgh Review</cite> articles (Jan. 1809).
- Hazlitt refers to it again. See <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">ante</span></i>, p. 139.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>And sweet religion</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Hamlet</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>III.</span> Scene 4.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Numbers without number.</em>’ <cite>Paradise Lost</cite>, <span
- class='fss'>III.</span> 346.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_61'>61</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Dissolves them</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Il Penseroso</span></i>, ll. 165–166.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>ON THE MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM</h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>No. 26 of the Round Table series. The essay was in substance republished in
-<cite>Characters of Shakespear’s Plays</cite>. See <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">ante</span></i>, pp. 244–248, and the notes thereon.</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt>PAGE</dt>
- <dd>&nbsp;
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_64'>64</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Age cannot wither</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Antony and Cleopatra</cite>, Act
- <span class='fss'>II.</span> Scene 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>’Tis a good piece of work</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>The Taming of the
- Shrew</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> Scene 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Would, cousin Silence</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>2 Henry IV.</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>III.</span> Scene 2. The dialogue on the death of old Double occurs earlier
- in the same scene.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>The most fearful wild-fowl living.</em>’ <cite>Midsummer Night’s Dream</cite>, Act
- <span class='fss'>III.</span> Scene 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><span class='pageno' id='Page_425'>425</span>At the end of this essay in <cite>The Examiner</cite> Hazlitt added the following
- ‘Note Extraordinary’: ‘We had just concluded our ramble with <em>Puck</em> and
- <em>Bottom</em>, and were beginning to indulge in some less airy recreations, when in
- came the last week’s <cite>Cobbett</cite>,<a id='r93' /><a href='#f93'
- class='c012'><sup>[93]</sup></a> and with one blow overset our Round
- Table, and marred all our good things. If while Mr. C. and his lady are sitting in their
- garden at Botley, like Adam and Eve in Paradise, the delight of one another, the envy of
- their neighbours, and the admiration of the rest of the world, suddenly a large fat hog
- from the wilds of Hampshire should bolt right through the hedge, and with snorting
- menaces and foaming tusks, proceed to lay waste the flower-pots and root up the potatoes,
- such as the surprise and indignation of so economical a couple would be on this occasion,
- was the consternation at our Table when Mr. Cobbett himself made his appearance among us,
- vowing vengeance against Milton and Shakespear, <em>Sir Hugh Evans</em> and <em>Justice
- Shallow</em>, and all the delights of human life. We were not prepared for such an onset.
- More barbarous than Mr. Wordsworth’s calling Voltaire dull,<a id='r94' /><a href='#f94'
- class='c012'><sup>[94]</sup></a> or than Voltaire’s calling Cato the
- only English tragedy;<a id='r95' /><a href='#f95' style='text-decoration: none;
- '><sup>[95]</sup></a> more barbarous than Mr. Locke’s admiration of Sir Richard
- Blackmore; more barbarous than the declaration of a German Elector—afterwards made into
- an English king—that he hated poets and painters; more barbarous than the Duke of
- Wellington’s letter to Lord Castlereagh,<a id='r96' /><a href='#f96'
- class='c012'><sup>[96]</sup></a> or than the <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Catalogue
- Raisonné</span></cite> of the Flemish Masters published in the <cite>Morning
- Chronicle</cite>,<a id='r97' /><a href='#f97' style='text-decoration: none;
- '><sup>[97]</sup></a> or than the Latin style of the second Greek scholar<a id='r98' /><a
- href='#f98' class='c012'><sup>[98]</sup></a> of the age, or the
- English style of the first:—more barbarous than any or all of these is Mr. Cobbett’s
- attack on our two great poets. As to Milton, except the fine egotism of the situation of
- Adam and Eve, which Mr. Cobbett has applied to himself, there is not much in him to touch
- our politician: but we cannot understand his attack upon Shakespear, which is cutting his
- own throat. If Mr. Cobbett is for getting rid of his kings and queens, his fops and his
- courtiers, if he is for pelting <em>Sir Hugh</em> and <em>Falstaff</em> off the stage,
- yet what will he say to <em>Jack Cade</em> and First and Second Mob? If we are to scout
- the Roman rabble, where will the <cite>Register</cite> find English readers? Has the
- author never found himself out in Shakespear? He may depend upon it he is there, for all
- the people that ever lived are there! Has he never been struck with the valour of
- <em>Ancient Pistol</em>, who “would not swagger in any shew of resistance to a
- Barbary-hen”?<a id='r99' /><a href='#f99' style='text-decoration: none;
- '><sup>[99]</sup></a> Can he not, upon occasion, “aggravate his voice”<a id='r100' /><a
- href='#f100' class='c012'><sup>[100]</sup></a> like <em>Bottom</em> in
- the play? In absolute insensibility, he is a fool to <em>Master Barnardine</em>; and
- there is enough of gross animal instinct in <em>Calyban</em> to make a whole herd of
- Cobbetts. Mr. Cobbett admires Bonaparte; and yet there is nothing finer in any of his
- addresses to the French people than what <cite>Coriolanus</cite> says to the Romans when
- they banish him. He abuses the Allies in good set terms; yet one speech of Constance
- describes them and their magnanimity better than all the columns of the <cite>Political
- Register</cite>. Mr. Cobbett’s address to the people of England<a id='r101' /><a
- href='#f101' class='c012'><sup>[101]</sup></a> on the alarm of an
- invasion, which was stuck on all the church-doors in Great Britain, was not more eloquent
- than <em>Henry V.’s</em> address to his soldiers before the battle of Agincourt; nor do
- we think Mr. Cobbett was ever a better specimen of the common English character than the
- two soldiers in the same play. After all, there is something so droll in his falling foul
- of Shakespear for want of delicacy, with his desperate lounges and bear-garden dexterity,
- snorting, fuming, and grunting, that we cannot help laughing at the affair, now that our
- surprise is over; as we suppose Mr. Cobbett does, if he can only keep him out of his
- premises by hallooing and hooting or dry blows, to see his old friend, Grill,<a id='r102'
- /><a href='#f102' class='c012'><sup>[102]</sup></a> trudging along the
- highroad in search of his acorns and pig-nuts.’
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_426'>426</span>
- <h4 class='c022'>THE BEGGAR’S OPERA</h4>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>One of Hazlitt’s ‘Theatrical Examiners,’ and published in <cite>The Examiner</cite> on
-June 18, 1815.</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt>PAGE</dt>
- <dd>&nbsp;
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_65'>65</a>.</dt>
- <dd><cite>The Beggar’s Opera</cite> was produced at Lincoln’s Inn Fields on January 29, 1728.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Happy alchemy of mind</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> Cf. Boswell (<cite>Life of
- Johnson</cite>, ed. G. B. Hill, iii. 65): ‘I have ever delighted in that intellectual
- chymistry, which can separate good qualities from evil in the same person.’
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>O’erstepping the modesty of nature.</em>’ <cite>Hamlet</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>III.</span> Scene 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Woman is like</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Beggar’s Opera</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>I.</span>
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Taken from Tibullus.</em> Hazlitt probably means Catullus and refers to the lines
- (<em>Carm.</em> 62)
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">‘Ut flos in saeptis secretus nascitur hortis,’ etc.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>I see him sweeter</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> Act <span class='fss'>I.</span>
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>There is some soul of goodness in things evil.</em>’ <cite>Henry V.</cite>, Act
- <span class='fss'>IV.</span> Scene 1.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_66'>66</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Hussey, hussey</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Beggar’s Opera</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>I.</span>
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Miss Hannah More’s laboured invectives.</em> Such as <cite>Thoughts on the Importance
- of the Manners of the Great to General Society</cite> (1788) and <cite>An Estimate of the
- Religion of the Fashionable World</cite> (1790). See <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">ante</span></i>, p. 154, for
- another expression of Hazlitt’s belief in the disciplinary value of <cite>The Beggar’s
- Opera</cite>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>Note. For further reference to Baron Grimm’s <cite>Correspondance</cite> (1812–14) see
- <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">ante</span></i>, p. 131, the essay ‘On the Literary Character.’ Claude Pierre Patu
- (1729–1757) published <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><cite>Choix de pièces traduites de l’anglais</cite> (de Robert
- Dodsley et John Gay)</span> in 1756. The collected works of Jean Joseph Vadé (1720–1757) were
- published in 1775.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>ON PATRIOTISM—A FRAGMENT</h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>This fragment is taken from one of the ‘Illustrations of Vetus’ which appeared
-originally in <cite>The Morning Chronicle</cite> and were republished in <cite>Political Essays</cite>.</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt>PAGE</dt>
- <dd>&nbsp;
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_67'>67</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>The love of mankind</em>‘, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> Rousseau’s <cite>Emile</cite>, Liv.
- <span class='fss'>IV.</span> p. 279 (edit. Garnier): a favourite quotation of Hazlitt’s.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>ON BEAUTY</h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>No. 29 of the Round Table series, and signed in <cite>The Examiner</cite>—‘An Amateur.’</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt>PAGE</dt>
- <dd>&nbsp;
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_68'>68</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Three Papers</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> Reynolds’s papers in the <cite>Idler</cite> are
- Nos. 76, 79, and 82. It is to the last, <cite>On the true idea of Beauty</cite>, that
- Hazlitt particularly refers.
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_427'>427</span></div>
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_69'>69</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Spenser’s description of Belphœbe.</em> <cite>The Faerie Queene</cite>, Book <span
- class='fss'>II.</span> Canto iii. st. 21 <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">et seq.</span></i>
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_70'>70</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Her full dark eyes</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> The reference seems to be to
- <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Leiden des jungen Werthers</span></cite> (December 6).
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_71'>71</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Pope’s translation.</em> Homer’s <cite>Odyssey</cite>, <span class='fss'>V.</span>
- 56–67.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>Note. <em>A classical friend.</em> Leigh Hunt.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>Note. ‘<em>That was Arion crown’d</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>The Faerie
- Queene</cite>, Book <span class='fss'>IV.</span> Canto xi. st. 23 and 24.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>Note. <em>A striking description.</em> Burke’s <cite>Reflections on the Revolution in
- France</cite> (<cite>Select Works</cite>, ed. Payne, ii. 89).
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>Note. <em>The idea is in ‘Don Quixote.’</em> Part <span class='fss'>II.</span> Chap,
- xlviii. In <cite>The Examiner</cite> this note was concluded as follows: ‘Much the same
- impression which the sight of the Queen of France made on Mr. Burke’s brain sixteen years
- before the French Revolution, did the reading of the New Eloise make on mine at the
- commencement of it. “Such is the stuff of which our dreams are made!”<a id='r103' /><a
- href='#f103' class='c012'><sup>[103]</sup></a> This man (Burke), who
- was a half poet and a half philosopher, has done more mischief than perhaps any other
- person in the world. His understanding was not competent to the discovery of any truth,
- but it was sufficient to palliate a lie; his reasons, of little weight in themselves,
- thrown into the scale of power, were dreadful. Without genius to adorn the beautiful, he
- had the art to throw a dazzling veil over the deformed and disgusting, and to strew the
- flowers of imagination over the rotten carcase of corruption, not to prevent, but to
- communicate the infection. His jealousy of Rousseau<a id='r104' /><a href='#f104'
- class='c012'><sup>[104]</sup></a> was one chief cause of his
- opposition to the French Revolution. The writings of the one had changed the institutions
- of a kingdom; while the speeches of the other, with the intrigues of his whole party, had
- changed nothing but the <em>turnspit of the King’s kitchen</em>.<a id='r105' /><a
- href='#f105' class='c012'><sup>[105]</sup></a> He would have blotted
- out the broad, pure light of Heaven, because it did not first shine in upon the narrow,
- crooked passages of St. Stephen’s Chapel. The genius of Rousseau had levelled the towers
- of the Bastile with the dust; our zealous reformist, who would rather be doing mischief
- than nothing, tried therefore to patch them up again, by calling that loathsome dungeon
- the King’s Castle, and by fulsome adulation of the virtues of a Court Strumpet. This man
- had the impudence to say<a id='r106' /><a href='#f106' style='text-decoration: none;
- '><sup>[106]</sup></a> that an Elector of Hanover was raised to the throne of these
- kingdoms, “in contempt of the will of the people,” while the hereditary successor was
- still alive. He was at once a liar, a coward, and a slave; a liar to his own heart, a
- coward to the success of his own cause, a slave to the power he despised. See his Letter
- about the Duke of Bedford, in which the man gets the better of the sycophant, and he
- belabours the Duke in good earnest. It is not a source of regret to reflect that he
- closed his eyes on the ruin of liberty, which he had been the principal means of
- effecting, and of his own projects, at the same time. He did not live to see that
- deliverance of mankind, bound hand and foot into the absolute, lasting, inexorable power
- of Kings and Priests, which the author of Joan of Arc<a id='r107' /><a href='#f107'
- class='c012'><sup>[107]</sup></a> has so triumphantly celebrated. He
- did not live to see the sending of the Liberales of Spain to the gallies, and the
- liberating the Afrancesadoes from prison, for which our romantic Laureate, who sees so
- much farther into futurity than the Edinburgh Reviewers,<a id='r108' /><a href='#f108'
- class='c012'><sup>[108]</sup></a> thanks God. He did not live to read
- that Sonnet<a id='r109' /><a href='#f109' style='text-decoration: none;
- '><sup>[109]</sup></a> to the King which Mr. Wordsworth has written, in imitation of
- Milton’s Sonnet to Cromwell. There is a species of literary prostitution which has sprung
- up and spread wide in these days, more nauseous and despicable than any recorded in
- Juvenal. It proves, however, one thing, that is, the force which knowledge and opinion
- have acquired, and which makes it worth while for power to court and pervert those
- faculties which were intended to enlighten and reform the world, in order to plunge it
- into a darkness that may be felt; and slavery, that can only cease by putting a stop to
- the propagation of the species.’ Hazlitt used a part of this passage as a note to his
- essay ‘On Good-Nature.’ See <em>post</em>, p. 105 note.
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_428'>428</span></div>
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_72'>72</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Mr. Burke</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> See his <cite>Essay on the Sublime and
- Beautiful</cite>, Part <span class='fss'>III.</span> Sect. xv.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Which describe pleasant motions.</em> ‘It has been conjectured that the pleasure
- derived from visible form, might be always resolved into the absence of every thing
- disagreeable to the touch or difficult in motion.’ Note by Hazlitt in <cite>The
- Examiner</cite>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>He hath set his bow</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Ecclesiasticus</cite>, xliii. 11,
- 12.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Titian’s ‘Bath of Diana.’</em> <cite>Diana and Actaeon</cite>, now the property of
- the Earl of Ellesmere, in Bridgewater House. Hazlitt described this picture at length in
- his <cite>Sketches of the Principal Picture Galleries in England</cite> (The Marquis of
- Stafford’s Gallery).
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>ON IMITATION</h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>No. 30 of the Round Table series.</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt>PAGE</dt>
- <dd>&nbsp;
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_73'>73</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>The new Spurzheim principles.</em> See Hazlitt’s essays ‘On Dreams’ and ‘On Dr.
- Spurzheim’s Theory’ in <cite>The Plain Speaker</cite>.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_74'>74</a>.</dt>
- <dd>Note. <em>Vanhuysum.</em> Jan van Huysum (1682–1749).
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_75'>75</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Pansy freak’d with jet.</em> <em>Lycidas</em>, l. 144.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_76'>76</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>A pleasure in art</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i>
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘There is a pleasure in poetic pains,</div>
- <div class='line'>Which only poets know.’</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in12'>Cowper’s <cite>Task, The Timepiece</cite>, ll. 285–286.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>Cf. <cite>Table Talk</cite> (‘On the Pleasure of Painting’): ‘There is a pleasure in
- painting which none but painters know.’ The original of the expression seems to be
- Dryden’s ‘There is a pleasure, sure, in being mad, which none but madmen know’
- (<cite>Spanish Friar</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> Scene 1).
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Titian’s ‘Schoolmaster.’</em> For an account of this picture see Hazlitt’s
- <cite>Sketches of the Principal Picture Galleries in England</cite> (the Marquis of
- Stafford’s Gallery).
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>ON GUSTO</h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>No. 40 of the Round Table series.</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt>PAGE</dt>
- <dd>&nbsp;
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_77'>77</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Albano’s.</em> Francesco Albani (1578–1660), a pupil of Ludovico Caracci.
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_429'>429</span></div>
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_78'>78</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>To touch them.</em> In <cite>The Examiner</cite> Hazlitt gives the following note to
- this passage: ‘This may seem obscure. We will therefore avail ourselves of our privilege
- to explain as Members of Parliament do, when they let fall any thing too paradoxical,
- novel, or abstruse, to be immediately apprehended by the other side of the House. When
- the Widow Wadman<a id='r110' /><a href='#f110' style='text-decoration: none;
- '><sup>[110]</sup></a> looked over my Uncle Toby’s map of the Siege of Namur with him,
- and as he pointed out the approaches of his battalion in a transverse line across the
- plain to the gate of St. Nicholas, kept her hand constantly pressed against his, if my
- Uncle Toby had then “been an artist and could paint,” (as Mr. Fox wished himself to be,<a
- id='r111' /><a href='#f111' class='c012'><sup>[111]</sup></a> that “he
- might draw Bonaparte’s conduct to the King of Prussia in the blackest colours”) my Uncle
- Toby would have drawn the hand of his fair enemy in the manner we have above described.
- We have heard a good story of this same Bonaparte playing off a very ludicrous parody of
- the Widow Wadman’s stratagem upon as great a commander by sea as my Uncle Toby was by
- land. Now, when Sir Isaac Newton, who was sitting smoking with his mistress’s hand in
- his, took her little finger and made use of it as a tobacco-pipe stopper, there was here
- a total absence of mind, or a great want of gusto.’
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Mr. West.</em> Benjamin West (1738–1820), historical painter, succeeded Sir J.
- Reynolds as President of the Royal Academy in 1792.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_80'>80</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Or where Chineses</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Paradise Lost</cite>, <span
- class='fss'>III.</span> 438–439.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Wild above rule</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Ib.</span></i> <span
- class='fss'>V.</span> 297.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>ON PEDANTRY</h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>No. 32 of the Round Table series. See <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">ante</span></i>, p. 382, for a reference by Hazlitt
-to this essay.</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt>PAGE</dt>
- <dd>&nbsp;
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_80'>80</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>The pedantry of Parson Adams.</em> See <cite>Joseph Andrews</cite>, Book <span
- class='fss'>III.</span> Chap. v.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Scotch Pedagogue.</em> <em>Roderick Random</em>, Chap. xiv.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Seeing ourselves</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> Burns, <em>To a Louse</em>, st. 8.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_81'>81</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Monsieur Jourdain.</em> In <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme</span></cite>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>Note. ‘<em>Not to admire anything.</em>’
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Nil admirari, prope res est una, Numici,</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Solaque, quæ possit facere et servare beatum.</span>’—Horace, Ep. <span class='fss'>I.</span> vi. <span class='fss'>I.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_82'>82</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>In the Library</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> At his father’s house at Wem. See
- <cite>Memoirs of William Hazlitt</cite>, i. 33. The <cite><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Bibliotheca Fratrum
- Polonorum</span></cite>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i>, was published in eight volumes folio, 1656.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>From all this world’s</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> ‘From worldly cares himselfe he did
- esloyne.’ <cite>The Faerie Queene</cite>, Book <span class='fss'>I.</span> Canto iv. st.
- 20. In <cite>The Examiner</cite> Hazlitt published the following note: ‘Mr. Wordsworth
- has on a late occasion humorously applied this line of Spenser to persons holding
- sinecure places under government. He seems to intend adding to the list of such places
- that of Poet Laureate. This we think a decided improvement on the system.’ The reference
- is to Wordsworth’s sonnet, ‘Occasioned by the Battle of Waterloo,’ beginning ‘The bard
- whose soul is meek as dawning day.’
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_83'>83</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Mitigated authors</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> ‘It was this opinion which mitigated
- kings into companions, and raised private men to be fellows with kings. Without force, or
- opposition, it subdued the fierceness of pride and power; it obliged sovereigns to submit
- to the soft collar of social esteem,’ etc. Burke’s <cite>Reflections on the Revolution in
- France</cite> (<cite>Select Works</cite>, ed. Payne, ii. 90).
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><cite>The Spectator.</cite> See <cite>The Spectator</cite>, No. 131.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_430'>430</span>
- <h4 class='c022'>THE SAME SUBJECT CONTINUED</h4>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>No. 33 the Round Table series.</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt>PAGE</dt>
- <dd>&nbsp;
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_84'>84</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>A poetical enthusiast.</em> Wordsworth presumably.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>A clerk ther was</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Canterbury Tales</cite>, Prologue,
- ll. 285 <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">et seq.</span></i>
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_85'>85</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Chemist, statesman</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> Dryden’s <cite>Absalom and
- Achitophel</cite>, l. 550.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Tongues in the trees</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>As You Like It</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>II.</span> Scene 1.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_86'>86</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Vestris was so far right</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> Vestris (1729–1808), ‘<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Le Dieu
- de la danse</span>,’ said that Europe contained only three great men, himself, Voltaire, and
- Frederick of Prussia.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>We do not see</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> Johnson and Wordsworth were of the opposite
- opinion. See Boswell’s <cite>Life</cite>, ed. G. B. Hill, iv. 114, and Rogers’s
- <cite>Table-Talk</cite>, p. 234.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_87'>87</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>In Froissart’s ‘Chronicles.’</em> Book <span class='fss'>IV.</span> chapter 14
- (<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Panthéon Litteraire</span>). The man was not a monk at all.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_88'>88</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>The sovereign’st thing on earth.</em>’ <cite>1 Henry IV.</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>I.</span> Scene 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Uneasy and insecure.</em> In <cite>The Examiner</cite> the following note is
- appended: ‘It has been found necessary to cement them with blood. “Plus de belles
- paroles, messieurs, je veux du sang,” is the language of all absolute sovereigns to their
- subjects, when the film drops from their eyes which leads mankind to suppose themselves
- the property of tyrants. If men are to be treated like slaves, it is best that they
- should think themselves born to be so. <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Plus de belles paroles.</span></i> The French
- Revolution was the necessary consequence of our English Revolution and of the
- Reformation. A crusade once more to re-establish the infallibility of the Pope all over
- the Continent would be a logical inference from the late crusade to restore divine right.’
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>ON THE CHARACTER OF ROUSSEAU</h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>No. 36 of the Round Table series.</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt>PAGE</dt>
- <dd>&nbsp;
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_89'>89</a>.</dt>
- <dd>Note. In <cite>The Examiner</cite> this note was continued as follows: ‘He was the
- founder of Jacobinism, which disclaims the division of the species into two classes, the
- one the property of the others. It was of the disciples of <em>his</em> school, where
- principle is converted into passion, that Mr. Burke said and said truly,—“Once a Jacobin,
- and always a Jacobin!” The adept in this school does not so much consider the political
- injury as the personal insult. This is the way to put the case, to set the true
- revolutionary leaven, the self-love which is at the bottom of every heart, at work, and
- this was the way in which Rousseau put it. It then becomes a question between man and
- man, which there is but one way of deciding.’
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_90'>90</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Va Zanetto</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> Part <span class='fss'>II.</span> liv. 7.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Louise Eleonore</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> Part <span class='fss'>I.</span> liv. 2.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_91'>91</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>As fast</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Othello</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>V.</span> Scene 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>There are, indeed, impressions</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> A quotation from Rousseau’s
- <cite>Confessions</cite>. See Hazlitt’s essay entitled ‘My first Acquaintance with Poets.’
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_92'>92</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Ah, voila de la pervenche!</span></i>’ <cite>Confessions</cite>, Part <span
- class='fss'>I.</span> liv. 6.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Mr. Wordsworth’s discovery.</em> The reference appears to be to Wordsworth’s poem,
- ‘The Sparrow’s Nest.’
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_431'>431</span>
- <h4 class='c022'>ON DIFFERENT SORTS OF FAME</h4>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>No. 37 of the Round Table series.</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt>PAGE</dt>
- <dd>&nbsp;
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_93'>93</a>.</dt>
- <dd><cite>Fitzosborne’s Letters</cite>, by William Melmoth the younger (1710–1799), were
- published in two vols. in 1742–1747. Hazlitt’s quotation seems to be merely a summary of
- a passage in Letter <span class='fss'>X.</span> (p. 35, edit. 1748) which is itself
- quoted from Wollaston’s <cite>Religion of Nature Delineated</cite>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>Note. <em>Burns.</em> See his autobiographical letter to Dr. John Moore, 2nd August 1787.
- (<cite>Works</cite>, ed. Chambers and Wallace, i. 20).
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_94'>94</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Bitter bad judges.</em>’ <cite>Beggar’s Opera</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>I.</span> Scene 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Makes ambition virtue.</em>’ <cite>Othello</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span>
- Scene 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Dr. Johnson.</em> See his Life of Milton (<cite>Works</cite>, vii. 108).
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Fame is the spur</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <em>Lycidas</em>, ll. 70–77.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Pluck its fruits, unripe and crude.</em> <em>Lycidas</em>, l. 3.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_95'>95</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Hogarth’s ‘Distressed Poet.’</em> The map of the gold-mines of Peru was substituted
- in the impression of 1740 for a print of Pope thrashing Curll in the original impression
- of 1736.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>A man of genius and eloquence.</em> Coleridge presumably.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_96'>96</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Elphinstone.</em> James Elphinston (1721–1809), who superintended an Edinburgh
- edition of <cite>The Rambler</cite>, in which he gave English translations of most of the
- mottoes. This, however, was far from being his only literary enterprise, and it is
- strange that Hazlitt should ‘know nothing more of him.’ He published many translations,
- one of which, <cite>A Specimen of the Translations of Epigrams of Martial</cite> (1778),
- achieved notoriety from its extreme badness. In his later life he devoted himself to the
- invention of a kind of phonetic spelling, which he explained in <cite>Propriety
- ascertained in her Picture, or English Speech and Spelling under Mutual Guides</cite>
- (1787), and other works.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Yorick and the Frenchman.</em> Sterne’s <cite>Sentimental Journey</cite>. The
- Passport.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>CHARACTER OF JOHN BULL</h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>No. 39 of the Round Table series.</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt>PAGE</dt>
- <dd>&nbsp;
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_97'>97</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>A respectable publication.</em> <cite>Edinburgh Review</cite>, xxvi. p. 96 (Feb.
- 1816). The passage quoted is from a review by Hazlitt himself of Schlegel’s
- <cite>Lectures on Dramatic Literature</cite>.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>ON GOOD NATURE</h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>No. 41 of the Round Table series.</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt>PAGE</dt>
- <dd>&nbsp;
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_100'>100</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Says Froissart.</em> This well-known saying is wrongly attributed to Froissart. See
- <cite>Notes and Queries</cite> for 1863 and subsequent years.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_102'>102</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>An Englishman, who would be thought a profound one.</em> Wordsworth. See p. 116.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_103'>103</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Forge the seal of the realm</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> The allusion seems to be to the
- events of the spring of 1804 when Lord Eldon, during the king’s illness, affixed the
- great seal to a commission giving the royal assent to certain bills.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_104'>104</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Good digestion wait on appetite.</em> <cite>Macbeth</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>III.</span> Scene 4.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><span class='pageno' id='Page_432'>432</span><em>Without control.</em> In <cite>The Examiner</cite> Hazlitt appended as a note:
- ‘Henry <span class='fss'>VIII.</span> was a good-natured monarch. He cut off his wives’
- heads with as little ceremony as if they had been eels. This character ought, as Mr.
- Cobbett says, to be hooted off the stage, as a disgrace to human nature. Shakspeare
- represented kings as they were in his time.’
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_104'>104</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Mr. Vansittart.</em> Nicholas Vansittart (1766–1851), created Baron Bexley in 1823,
- was Chancellor of the Exchequer from 1812 till 1822.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Everything by starts and nothing long.</em> <cite>Absalom and Achitophel</cite>, Part
- <span class='fss'>I.</span> l. 548.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_105'>105</a>.</dt>
- <dd>Note. This note is part of the note on Burke, which in <cite>The Examiner</cite> appeared
- at the foot of the essay ‘On Beauty.’ See <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">ante</span></i>, p. 71.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>ON THE CHARACTER OF MILTON’S EVE</h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>No. 42 of the Round Table series, with occasional passages from No. 43, on
-Shakspeare’s female characters, the substance of which was published in <cite>Characters
-of Shakespear’s Plays</cite> (<cite>Cymbeline</cite>, <cite>Othello</cite>, and <cite>Winter’s Tale</cite>).</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt>PAGE</dt>
- <dd>&nbsp;
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_105'>105</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>As the vine curls her tendrils.</em>’ <cite>Paradise Lost</cite>, <span
- class='fss'>IV.</span> 307.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_106'>106</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Two of far nobler shape</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Paradise Lost</cite>, <span
- class='fss'>IV.</span> 288–311.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_107'>107</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>That day I oft remember</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Paradise Lost</cite>, <span
- class='fss'>IV.</span> 449–465.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>So spake our general mother</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Paradise Lost</cite>,
- <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 492–501.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>So much the more</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Paradise Lost</cite>, <span
- class='fss'>V.</span> 8–20.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_108'>108</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>When Adam thus to Eve</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Paradise Lost</cite>, <span
- class='fss'>IV.</span> 610–611.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>To whom thus Eve</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Paradise Lost</cite>, <span
- class='fss'>IV.</span> 634.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>To whom our general ancestor</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Paradise Lost</cite>,
- <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 659–660.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Methought close at mine ear</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Paradise Lost</cite>,
- <span class='fss'>V.</span> 35–47.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>So talked the spirited sly snake.</em>’ <cite>Paradise Lost</cite>, <span
- class='fss'>IX.</span> 613.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>So cheered he his fair spouse</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Paradise Lost</cite>,
- <span class='fss'>V.</span> 129–135.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_109'>109</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Under his forming hands</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Paradise Lost</cite>, <span
- class='fss'>VIII.</span> 470–477.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>In shadier bower</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Paradise Lost</cite>, <span
- class='fss'>IV.</span> 705–719.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Meanwhile at table Eve</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Paradise Lost</cite>, <span
- class='fss'>V.</span> 443–450.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_110'>110</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Yet not more sweet</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> Southey’s <cite>Carmen Nuptiale</cite>,
- Proem, stanza 18.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>O unexpected stroke</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Paradise Lost</cite>, <span
- class='fss'>XI.</span> 268–285.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_111'>111</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>This most afflicts me</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Paradise Lost</cite>, <span
- class='fss'>XI.</span> 315–333.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>OBSERVATIONS ON MR. WORDSWORTH’S POEM ‘THE EXCURSION’</h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>This essay is composed of two papers by Hazlitt which appeared in <cite>The Examiner</cite>
-on August 21 and August 28, 1814.</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt>PAGE</dt>
- <dd>&nbsp;
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_112'>112</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Without form and void.</em>’ <cite>Genesis</cite>, i. 2.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_113'>113</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>The bare trees and mountains bare.</em>’ Wordsworth, ‘To my Sister.’
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Exchange the shepherd’s flock.</em>’ <cite>Excursion</cite>, Book <span
- class='fss'>VI.</span>
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_114'>114</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>The sad historian of the pensive vale.</em>’ Goldsmith’s <cite>The Deserted
- Village</cite>, l. 136.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Our system is not fashioned</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Excursion</cite>, Book
- <span class='fss'>VI.</span>
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Such as the meeting soul may pierce.</em>’ <cite><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">L’Allegro</span></cite>, l. 138.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>In that fair clime</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Excursion</cite>, Book <span
- class='fss'>IV.</span>
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_433'>433</span></div>
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_115'>115</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Now shall our great discoverers obtain</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i>
- <cite>Excursion</cite>, Book <span class='fss'>IV.</span>
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_116'>116</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Poor gentleman</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> Wycherley’s <cite>Love in a Wood</cite>, Act
- <span class='fss'>III.</span> Scene 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Dull.</em> Wordsworth speaks of <cite>Candide</cite> as ‘this dull product of a
- scoffer’s pen’ (<cite>Excursion</cite>, Book <span class='fss'>II.</span>) and refers to
- it again in Book <span class='fss'>IV.</span>:—
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in22'>‘Him I mean</div>
- <div class='line'>Who penned, to ridicule confiding faith,</div>
- <div class='line'>This sorry Legend.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>See <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">ante</span></i>, p. 102.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_117'>117</a>.</dt>
- <dd><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>Tout homme reflechi</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> Cf. ‘J’ose presque assurer que
- l’état de réflexion est un état contre nature, et que l’homme qui médite est un animal
- dépravé.’ Rousseau’s <cite>Discours sur l’origine de l’inégalité parmi les hommes</cite>
- (édit. Firmin-Didot, p. 52).</span>
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>From that abstraction I was roused</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Excursion</cite>,
- Book <span class='fss'>III.</span>
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_118'>118</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>For that other loss</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Excursion</cite>, Book <span
- class='fss'>IV.</span>
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_119'>119</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>What though the radiance</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Intimations of
- Immortality</cite>, stanza 10.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>THE SAME SUBJECT CONTINUED</h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>From <cite>The Examiner</cite>, October 2, 1814.</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt>PAGE</dt>
- <dd>&nbsp;
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_120'>120</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>With glistering spires</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Paradise Lost</cite>, <span
- class='fss'>III.</span> 550.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>The great vision of the guarded mount.</em>’ <em>Lycidas</em>, l. 161.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_121'>121</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>A sudden illness</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Excursion</cite>, Book <span
- class='fss'>VI.</span>
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_123'>123</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Aristotle observed.</em> In <cite>The Poetics</cite>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Bells or Lancaster’s.</em> Andrew Bell (1753–1832) founder of the Madras system of
- education, and Joseph Lancaster (1770–1838). For an account of these two rival reformers
- of education see Leslie Stephen’s <cite>The English Utilitarians</cite>, <span
- class='fss'>II.</span> 17–19.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Guzman d’Alfarache.</em> Hazlitt discussed this novel by Mateo Aleman, published in
- 1599, in his <cite>English Comic Writers</cite> (Lecture on the English Novelists).
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>A discipline of humanity.</em> Bacon’s <cite>Essays</cite>, ‘Of Marriage and Single
- Life.’
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_124'>124</a>.</dt>
- <dd><cite>The Whig and Jacobite friends.</cite> <cite>Excursion</cite>, Book <span
- class='fss'>VI.</span>
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Sir Alfred Irthing.</em> <cite>Excursion</cite>, Book <span class='fss'>VII.</span>
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Have proved a monument.</em>’ From the sonnet in which Wordsworth dedicated
- <cite>The Excursion</cite> to Lord Lonsdale.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>CHARACTER OF THE LATE MR. PITT</h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>This ‘character’ originally appeared in <cite>Free Thoughts on Public Affairs</cite>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i>
-(1806). It must have been a favourite with the author, for he afterwards reprinted
-it in <cite>The Eloquence of the British Senate</cite>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> (1807), in <cite>The Round Table</cite> (1817), and
-in <cite>Political Essays</cite> (1819). It also appeared in the posthumous <cite>Winterslow</cite>
-(1839). See note on p. 383, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">ante</span></i>.</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt>PAGE</dt>
- <dd>&nbsp;
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_127'>127</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>They had learned the trick</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> Hobbes’s <cite>Behemoth</cite>
- (<cite>Works</cite>, ed. Molesworth, vi. 240).
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_128'>128</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Not matchless</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Paradise Lost</cite>, <span
- class='fss'>VI.</span> 341–2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>And in its liquid texture</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Paradise Lost</cite>, <span
- class='fss'>VI.</span> 148–149.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_434'>434</span>
- <h4 class='c022'>ON RELIGIOUS HYPOCRISY</h4>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>From <cite>The Examiner</cite>, October 9, 1814, ‘Common-places,’ No. 1.</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt>PAGE</dt>
- <dd>&nbsp;
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_129'>129</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>But ’tis not so above.</em>’ Hamlet, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> Scene 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Compelled to give in evidence</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Ibid.</span></i>
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_130'>130</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Open and apparent shame.</em>’ <cite>1 Henry IV.</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>II.</span> Scene 4.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_131'>131</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Elymas the sorcerer.</em> See <cite>Sketches of the Principal Picture Galleries in
- England</cite> (the Pictures at Hampton Court) where Hazlitt describes this cartoon.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>ON THE LITERARY CHARACTER</h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>Reprinted with some omissions from a letter which appeared in <cite>The Morning
-Chronicle</cite> for October 28, 1813, entitled ‘Baron Grimm and the Edinburgh
-Reviewers.’</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt>PAGE</dt>
- <dd>&nbsp;
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_131'>131</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>A late number</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Edinburgh Review</cite>, vol. xxi. July
- 1813. The <cite>Correspondance</cite> of Friedrich Melchior, Baron Grimm (1723–1807) was
- published in 1812–14. The article in the <cite>Edinburgh</cite> is by Jeffrey. Hazlitt,
- in <cite>The Examiner</cite>, quotes from it at greater length, and proceeds: ‘These
- remarks, however shrewd and ingenious in themselves, are somewhat irrelevant to the
- literary and philosophical character of Mr. Grimm and his friends. There seems to have
- been an odd transposition of ideas in the writer’s mind; for the whole of his reasoning
- relates to the manners of fashionable life, or the tendency of mixed and agreeable
- society in general, to produce levity and insensibility, and does not at all apply to the
- peculiar defects of the literary character, or account for that hard-heartedness, which
- Mr. Burke attributes, by way of emphasis, to the <em>thorough-bred metaphysician</em>.<a
- id='r112' /><a href='#f112' class='c012'><sup>[112]</sup></a> The two
- characters are evidently distinct, and proceed from very different and even opposite
- causes, which ought not to have been confounded. It would have been a task worthy of the
- Edinburgh Reviewers to have pointed out the sources of each, and to have shewn how both
- appear to have united in the present instance with the natural levity of the French
- character, to produce that “faultless monster which the world ne’er saw” before.<a
- id='r113' /><a href='#f113' class='c012'><sup>[113]</sup></a> Much is
- undoubtedly to be given to accidental and local circumstances. Boswell’s Life of Johnson
- presents a very different picture of men and manners from Grimm’s Memoirs, though in the
- circle described by the former there were men who at least rivalled M. Grimm in
- literature, and in politeness and knowledge of mankind might vie with Baron d’Holbach.
- The profligacy of the French court, and the mummeries of the established religion might
- naturally produce an almost satiric license and impudence among the enlightened partisans
- of the new order of things, and lead them to regard all religion as a barefaced cheat,
- and every pretension to virtue as hypocrisy. The peculiar intelligible features of the
- philosophical and literary character are, however, stamped on every page of M. Grimm’s
- correspondence; and as they do not seem to have been very well distinguished by the
- Reviewer, I shall venture to throw out a few hints on the subject, in the hope that they
- may be taken up and embodied in an authentic form in some future supplementary volume.’
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_435'>435</span></div>
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_133'>133</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Multiplicity of persons and things.</em> Hazlitt quotes with characteristic
- inaccuracy the <cite>Edinburgh</cite> article on Grimm (see p. 131). A few lines further
- on he speaks of a ‘<em>succession</em> of persons and things.’
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Rocks of Meillerie.</em> <cite>La Nouvelle Héloïse</cite>, Part <span
- class='fss'>IV.</span> 17.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_135'>135</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Mr. Shandy.</em> <cite>Tristram Shandy</cite>, <span class='fss'>V.</span> Chap,
- iii., where Sterne tells the story of Cicero and his daughter referred to in the text.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Hæret lateri</span></i>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> Virgil, <cite>Aeneid</cite>, <span
- class='fss'>V.</span> 73.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Clad in flesh and blood.</em>’ From Burke, <cite>Reflections on the Revolution in
- France</cite> (<cite>Select Works</cite>, ed. Payne, ii. 101).
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>The ghosts of Homer’s heroes.</em> <cite>Odyssey</cite>, Book <span
- class='fss'>XI.</span>
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Play round the head, but never reach the heart.</em>’
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘All fame is foreign, but of true desert;</div>
- <div class='line'>Plays round the head, but comes not to the heart.’</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in30'>Pope’s <cite>Essay on Man</cite>, <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 254.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>Hazlitt’s letter in <cite>The Morning Chronicle</cite> concluded as follows: ‘There is
- another very striking distinction between the indifference and insensibility to moral
- good and evil, to be met with in the philosopher or the man of the world, which the
- Reviewer has not pointed out. In the one, it is the effect of “frivolity, dissipation,
- and familiarity with vice”; in the other, it is oftener the effect of disappointed hope
- and early enthusiasm. The aversion of the philosopher to moral speculations has almost
- always the same source as the exclamation of Brutus, “Oh Virtue! I embraced thee as a
- substance, and I find thou art a shadow!” There is hardly any one of the persons who
- figure in these memoirs who did not set out with some panacea for the salvation of
- mankind, with as much sanguine extravagance as ever knight-errants indulged to conquer
- giants and rescue distressed damsels. The wounds received in the conflict might close,
- but the scar would remain. Indeed, the practical knowledge of vice and misery makes a
- stronger impression on the mind, when it has once imbibed a habit of abstract reasoning.
- Evil thus becomes embodied in a general principle, and shews its happy form in all
- things. It is a fatal, inevitable necessity hanging over us. It follows us wherever we
- go—if we fly into the uttermost parts of the earth, it is there; whether we turn to the
- right or the left, we cannot escape from it.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘This, it is true, is the disease of philosophy; but it is one to which it is liable in
- minds of a certain cast, after the first ardour of expectation has been disabused by
- experience, and the finer feelings have received an irrecoverable shock from the jarring
- of the world.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘There seems a peculiar tenaciousness in the French character in this respect, an
- unfortunate aptitude to cling to every vice and catch at every folly, or else a want of
- freshness of feeling, of that elastic force about the heart which repels the approach of
- moral or intellectual depravity.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘What is said of the tone of the literary society of Paris, is equally misunderstood. The
- Reviewers hardly mean to represent the exclusion of tediousness and pertinacious
- wrangling, as the general character of assemblies of wits, and philosophers in all ages
- and nations. If so, their opinion differs from that of the Sage. The fact is, that the
- men of letters at this period, by mixing in the fashionable circles, took the tone of
- good company, as the people of fashion, by their familiarity with men of letters,
- received the tincture of philosophy. The two characters were blended together in real
- life, and are confounded in the Edinburgh Review.’
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_135'>135</a>.</dt>
- <dd>Note. <cite>Plato’s Cave.</cite> <cite>Republic</cite>, Book <span class='fss'>VII.</span>
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_436'>436</span>
- <h4 class='c022'>ON COMMON-PLACE CRITICS</h4>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>No. 47 of the Round Table series.</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt>PAGE</dt>
- <dd>&nbsp;
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_136'>136</a>.</dt>
- <dd><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>Tout homme réfléchi</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i></span> See note to p. 117.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Nor can I think what thoughts they can conceive.</em>’ Dryden, <cite>The Hind and
- the Panther</cite>, Part <span class='fss'>I.</span> l. 315.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>We have already.</em> In a paper (by Leigh Hunt) <cite>On Commonplace People</cite>
- (<cite>Examiner</cite>, March 19, 1815).
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_138'>138</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>The music which has been since introduced</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> The famous ‘Macbeth
- music’ written for D’Avenant’s version produced, according to Genest, in 1672. This
- music, traditionally assigned to Matthew Locke, is now attributed to Purcell.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_139'>139</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Mr. Westall’s drawings.</em> Richard Westall (1765–1836).
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Horne Tooke’s account</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> See <cite>The Diversions of
- Purley</cite> and Hazlitt’s essay on Horne Tooke in <cite>The Spirit of the Age</cite>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>For true no-meaning puzzles more than wit.</em>’ Pope’s <cite>Moral Essays</cite>,
- <span class='fss'>II.</span> 114.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>The new Schools for all.</em> For the famous educational schemes of Andrew Bell and
- Joseph Lancaster and for Bentham’s <cite>Panopticon</cite>, see Leslie Stephen’s
- <cite>English Utilitarians</cite>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><cite>The Penitentiary.</cite> Millbank Prison, formerly known as the Penitentiary, was
- the ultimate result of Bentham’s <cite>Panopticon</cite> scheme and was opened in 1816.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>The new Bedlam.</em> The new Bedlam Hospital was opened in 1815.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>The new steamboats.</em> The first steamboat had been launched on the Clyde in 1812.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>The gaslights.</em> The Chartered Gas Company obtained its Act of Parliament in 1810.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><cite>The Bible Society.</cite> The British and Foreign Bible Society was established in
- 1804.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><cite>The Society for the Suppression of Vice.</cite> See <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">ante</span></i>, note to p.
- 60.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>ON THE CATALOGUE RAISONNÉ OF THE BRITISH INSTITUTION</h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>These two papers are taken (with considerable variations) from the two last of
-three ‘Literary Notices,’ dealing with the Catalogue, which Hazlitt contributed to
-<cite>The Examiner</cite> on Nov. 3, Nov. 10, and Nov. 17, 1816. The first of these
-‘Literary Notices’ was never republished by Hazlitt. All three were republished
-in their <cite>Examiner</cite> form in the second volume of <cite>Criticisms on Art</cite>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> (2 vols.,
-1843–44), edited by the author’s son, who omitted from his edition of <cite>The
-Round Table</cite> the two essays in the present text. All three essays will be included
-in a later volume of the present edition.</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt>PAGE</dt>
- <dd>&nbsp;
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_140'>140</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Our former remarks.</em> In <cite>The Examiner</cite>, Nov. 3, 1816.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_141'>141</a>.</dt>
- <dd><cite>The Prince Regent’s new sewer.</cite> Presumably the Regent’s Canal, part of which
- was opened in 1814.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_142'>142</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>The scale by which</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Paradise Lost</cite>, <span
- class='fss'>VIII.</span> 591.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Mrs. Peachum’s coloured handkerchiefs.</em> <cite>Beggar’s Opera</cite>, Act 1.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_143'>143</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>A name great above all names.</em>’ <cite>Philippians</cite>, ii. 9.
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_437'>437</span></div>
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_143'>143</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Mr. Payne Knight.</em> Richard Payne Knight gave evidence in 1816 before a Select
- Committee of the House of Commons upon the value of the Elgin Marbles. He placed them in
- the second rank of art, and valued them at £25,000. They were bought by the nation for
- £35,000. Haydon the artist wrote a long letter to <cite>The Examiner</cite> (March 17,
- 1816) on the subject, entitled ‘On the Judgment of Connoisseurs being preferred to that
- of Professional Men, Elgin Marbles, etc.’
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_144'>144</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Mr. Soane.</em> John Soane (1753–1837), knighted in 1831. His house and its contents,
- presented by him to the nation in 1833, now form the Soane Museum.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>With riches fineless.</em>’ <cite>Othello</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span>
- Scene 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Beastly; subtle as the fox</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Cymbeline</cite>, Act.
- <span class='fss'>III.</span> Scene 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>The link</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Troilus and Cressida</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>I.</span> Scene 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>It is many years ago</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> Apparently, says Mr. W. C. Hazlitt,
- about 1798, at St. Neot’s, Huntingdonshire. See <cite>The English Comic Writers</cite>,
- where this passage is repeated in the Lecture on the Works of Hogarth.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_145'>145</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>How were we then uplifted.</em>’ <cite>Troilus and Cressida</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>III.</span> Scene 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Temples not made with hands</em>‘, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Acts</cite>, vii. 48.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><cite>E. O. Tables.</cite> A new game introduced shortly before 1782, when a Bill was
- brought in prohibiting it under severe penalties. The Bill was lost in the House of
- Lords. See <cite>Parl. Hist.</cite>, vol. xxiii. pp. 110–113.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Cutpurses of the art</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i>
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘A cutpurse of the empire and the rule,</div>
- <div class='line'>That from a shelf the precious diadem stole</div>
- <div class='line'>And put it in his pocket!’</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in22'><cite>Hamlet</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> Scene 4.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>THE SAME SUBJECT CONTINUED</h4>
-
- <dl class='dl_1 c004'>
- <dt><a href='#Page_146'>146</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>That a great man’s memory</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Hamlet</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>III.</span> Scene 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Their late President.</em> Sir Joshua Reynolds.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_147'>147</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Feel the future in the instant.</em>’ <cite>Macbeth</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>I.</span> Scene 5.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_148'>148</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Depend upon it</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> This letter was not avowed by Burke, but was
- attributed to him by Barry himself and by Sir James Prior in his <cite>Life of
- Burke</cite>, (Bohn, p. 227).
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_149'>149</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Playing at will</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i>
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in16'>‘——and played at will</div>
- <div class='line'>Her virgin fancies, pouring forth more sweet,</div>
- <div class='line'>Wild above rule or art, enormous bliss.’</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in18'><cite>Paradise Lost</cite>, v. 294–296.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Highmore</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> Joseph Highmore (1692–1780); Francis Hayman
- (1708–1776), one of the founders of the Royal Academy; Thomas Hudson (1701–1779),
- portrait painter; Sir Godfrey Kneller (1646–1723).
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Like flowers in men’s caps</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Macbeth</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>IV.</span> Scene 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Hoppner</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> John Hoppner (1758–1810), the portrait painter; John
- Opie (1761–1807); Sir Martin Archer Shee (1769–1850), President of the Royal Academy from
- 1830 to 1845; Philip James Loutherbourg (1740–1812), scene painter to Garrick; John
- Francis Rigaud (1742–1810); George Romney (1734–1802). Alderman John Boydell’s
- (1719–1804) famous Shakespeare Gallery comprised one hundred and seventy pictures. The
- engravings were published in 1802.
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_438'>438</span></div>
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_150'>150</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Gone to the vault</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> A favourite quotation of Burke’s from the
- lines in Shakespeare:—
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in8'>‘To that same ancient vault</div>
- <div class='line'>Where all the kindred of the Capulets lie.’</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in20'><cite>Romeo and Juliet</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> Scene 1.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>The picture ... of Charles I.</em> In Hazlitt’s time this picture was at Blenheim,
- and he referred to it in his <cite>Sketches of the Principal Picture Galleries in
- England</cite> (Pictures at Oxford and Blenheim). It was bought by Parliament from the
- Duke of Marlborough in 1885, and is now in the National Gallery.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><cite>The Waterloo Exhibition.</cite> The Waterloo Museum in Pall Mall ‘which now
- (according to the advertisement) presents to public view upwards of 1000 mementos of the
- late extraordinary events upon the Continent.’
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>From this time forth</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Othello</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>V.</span> Scene 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><cite>The English are a shopkeeping nation.</cite> Hazlitt probably refers to the
- exclamation of Barère said to have been repeated by Napoleon. The expression seems to
- have been first used by Dean Tucker of Gloucester in a <em>Tract</em> of 1766.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Balm of hurt minds</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Macbeth</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>II.</span> Scene 2.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_151'>151</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Smoothing the raven down</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Comus</cite>, 251–252.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>ON POETICAL VERSATILITY</h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>This fragment is taken from the third of a series of four ‘Illustrations of the
-Times Newspaper,’ which Hazlitt contributed to <cite>The Examiner</cite> under the heading
-of ‘Literary Notices.’ The first of these four papers (Dec. 1, 1816) has not been
-republished; the other three, dated respectively December 15, 1816, December 22,
-1816, and January 12, 1817, were published in <cite>Political Essays</cite>.</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt>PAGE</dt>
- <dd>&nbsp;
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_151'>151</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Heaven’s own tinct.</em>’ <cite>Cymbeline</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span>
- Scene 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Being so majestical</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Hamlet</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>I.</span> Scene 1.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_152'>152</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Poets, it has been said.</em> See <cite>Political Essays</cite> (Mr. Southey’s New
- Year’s Ode).
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>They do not like</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> The reference is to Southey, Poet Laureate,
- and Wordsworth, distributor of stamps for the county of Westmoreland.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>ON ACTORS AND ACTING</h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>This essay and the next are based upon the last (No. 48) of the Round Table
-series, which appeared in <cite>The Examiner</cite> for Jan. 5, 1817. Hazlitt has, however,
-interpolated into both essays various passages from former theatrical criticisms.
-The paper in the <cite>Round Table</cite> appears to have been inspired by Colley Cibber’s
-<cite>Apology for his Life</cite>. A general reference may here be made to that work, to the
-volume in the present edition containing Hazlitt’s dramatic criticisms, and to
-Lamb’s and Leigh Hunt’s essays on the stage.</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt>PAGE</dt>
- <dd>&nbsp;
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_153'>153</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>The abstracts</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Hamlet</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>II.</span> Scene 2.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_154'>154</a>.</dt>
- <dd><cite>George Barnwell.</cite> By George Lillo (1693–1739), produced at Drury Lane Theatre
- on June 22, 1731. The play was frequently revived, and was in some places acted annually
- as a moral lesson to apprentices.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><cite>The Inconstant.</cite> Farquhar’s comedy (1702). <em>Orinda</em> should be
- <em>Oriana</em>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Mr. Liston.</em> John Liston (1776?-1846),the comic actor, who made his first
- appearance in 1805 and retired in 1837.
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_439'>439</span></div>
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_155'>155</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Sir George Etherege</em> (1635?-1691), the dramatist. See <cite>English Comic
- Writers</cite>, where a part of this passage is repeated.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>John Kemble.</em> John Philip Kemble (1757–1823). Hazlitt wrote an account of his
- retirement from the stage, which took place at Covent Garden on June 23, 1817.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Pierre.</em> In Otway’s <cite>Venice Preserved</cite> (1682), ‘one of the happiest
- and most spirited of all Mr. Kemble’s performances’ (<cite>A View of the English
- Stage</cite>).
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><cite>The Stranger.</cite> Benjamin Thompson’s (1776?-1816) play, ‘The Stranger,’
- translated from Kotzebue, was produced in 1798, Kemble playing the title-rôle. See
- Hazlitt’s essay on ‘Mr. Kemble’s Retirement.’
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>A tale of other times.</em>’ ‘A tale of the times of old!’ the opening words of
- Macpherson’s <cite>Ossian</cite>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>One of the most affecting things</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> This paragraph is taken from
- a ‘Theatrical Examiner’ (June 4, 1815) on the retirement of John Bannister (1760–1836)
- from the stage. For Bannister and Richard Suett (1755–1805) see Hazlitt’s essay ‘On
- Play-Going and on Some of our old Actors,’ and Lamb’s ‘On Some of the old Actors.’
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><cite>The Prize.</cite> By Prince Hoare (1755–1834), originally produced in 1793.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Mrs. Storace.</em> Anna Selina Storace or Storache (1766–1817), the singer and
- actress, played in ‘The Prize’ in 1793.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>My Grandmother.</em> By Prince Hoare, produced in 1793.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><cite>The Son-in-Law.</cite> A comic opera by John O’Keeffe (1747–1833), produced in 1779.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Scrub.</em> In <cite>The Beaux’ Stratagem</cite> of Farquhar.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>Thomas King (1730–1805), the original Sir Peter Teazle; William Parsons (1736–1795);
- James William Dodd (1740–1796); John Quick (1748–1831), who made his last appearance in
- 1813; and John Edwin the elder (1749–1790). See Hazlitt’s essay ‘On Play-Going and Some
- of our old Actors.’
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_156'>156</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>All the world’s a stage</em>’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>As You Like It</cite>, Act
- <span class='fss'>II.</span> Scene 7.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>THE SAME SUBJECT CONTINUED</h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>A large part of the first paragraph of this essay appeared originally in a notice of
-Kean’s Sir Giles Overreach (‘Theatrical Examiner,’ Jan. 14, 1816). See <cite>A View
-of the English Stage</cite>.</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt>PAGE</dt>
- <dd>&nbsp;
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_156'>156</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Leaving the world no copy.</em>’ <cite>Twelfth Night</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>I.</span> Scene 5.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Colley Cibber’s account.</em> See Chap. iv. of Cibber’s <cite>Apology</cite>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Miss O’Neill.</em> Eliza O’Neill (1791–1872) made her last appearance on the stage on
- July 13, 1819, shortly before her marriage with Mr. Becher, who afterwards became a
- baronet. Hazlitt in an article on her retirement (see <cite>A View of the English
- Stage</cite>) said that ‘her excellence (unrivalled by any actress since Mrs. Siddons)
- consisted in truth of nature and force of passion.’
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Mrs. Siddons.</em> Sarah Siddons (1755–1831) appeared without success in London in
- 1775 and 1776, gained a great reputation in Manchester and Bath, and reappeared in London
- on October 10, 1782 in Garrick’s <cite>Isabella</cite>, a version of Southerne’s
- <cite>Fatal Marriage</cite>. After a long series of triumphs she made her farewell
- appearance on June 29, 1812, as Lady Macbeth. Hazlitt’s notices of her are confined to
- two of the occasional benefit performances which she gave before she finally retired in
- June 1819. See <cite>A View of the English Stage</cite> (June 15, 1816, and June 7, 1817).
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_440'>440</span></div>
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_157'>157</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>We have seen what a ferment</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> See the essays above, ‘On the
- Catalogue Raisonné of the British Institution.’
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Betterton</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> Thomas Betterton (1635?-1710); Barton Booth
- (1681–1733); Robert Wilks (1665?-1732); Samuel Sandford, a well-known actor on the
- Restoration stage, who died early in the eighteenth century; James Nokes (<em>d.</em>
- 1692); Anthony Leigh (<em>d.</em> 1692); William Pinkethman (<em>d.</em> 1724); William
- Bullock (<em>d.</em> 1740?); Richard Estcourt (1668–1712); Thomas Dogget (<em>d.</em>
- 1721): Elizabeth Barry (1658–1713); Susanna Mountfort, the daughter of William Mountfort,
- the actor and dramatist, who was murdered by Captain Hill and Lord Mohun in 1692; Anne
- Oldfield (1683–1730); Anne Bracegirdle (1663?-1748), who retired from the stage in 1707
- after being defeated in a competition with Mrs. Oldfield; Susannah Maria Cibber
- (1714–1766), sister of Arne the composer, and wife of Theophilus Cibber, famous first as
- a singer (especially of Handel’s music), and later as an actress of tragedy.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Cibber himself.</em> Colley Cibber (1671–1757), actor and dramatist, Poet Laureate
- from 1730 till his death. For a very entertaining account of himself and of nearly all
- the well-known actors and actresses whose names appear in the preceding note see his
- <cite>Apology for his Life</cite> (1740).
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Macklin</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> Charles Macklin (1697?-1797), actor and dramatist,
- whose great part was Shylock; James Quin (1693–1766); John Rich (1682–1761), the
- originator of pantomime in England (his name is substituted by Hazlitt for that of Peg
- Woffington, which appeared in the original <cite>Round Table</cite> paper); Catherine or
- Kitty Clive (1711–1785), whose acting and ‘sprightliness of humour’ were admired by Dr.
- Johnson, and Hannah Pritchard (1711–1768), who created the part of Irene in Johnson’s
- play, and Frances Abington (1737–1815), well-known members of Garrick’s company; Thomas
- Weston (1737–1776), and Edward Shuter (1728–1776), two of the best comic actors of their
- time.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Gladdened life</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> A composite quotation from Johnson’s
- well-known reference to Garrick (<cite>Lives of the Poets</cite>, Edmund Smith). See
- Boswell’s <cite>Life of Johnson</cite>, ed. G. B. Hill, iii. 387.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Our hundred days.</em> The reference is a characteristic one to Buonaparte’s hundred
- days in Europe in 1815.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Betterton’s Hamlet or his Brutus</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> Colley Cibber
- (<cite>Apology</cite>, Chap, iv.) refers particularly to these two impersonations,
- describes (Chap. xiv.) Booth’s performance of Cato in 1713, and specially eulogises Mrs.
- Barry’s Monimia and Belvidera in Otway’s plays, <cite>The Orphan</cite> and <em>Venice
- Preserved</em>. (Chap. v.). See Hazlitt’s lecture ‘On the Spirit of Ancient and Modern
- Literature’ in his <cite>Lectures on the Literature of the Age of Elizabeth</cite> for a
- criticism of these plays. He saw and reviewed Miss O’Neill’s performances in both these
- characters. See <cite>A View of the English Stage</cite>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Penkethman’s manner</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> See <cite>The Tatler</cite>, No. 188.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Dowton.</em> Hazlitt spoke of William Dowton (1764–1851) as ‘a genuine and excellent
- comedian’ (‘On Play-Going and on Some of the old Actors’). There are frequent notices of
- him in <cite>A View of the English Stage</cite>.
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_441'>441</span></div>
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_157'>157</a>.</dt>
- <dd>Note. <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Marriage à la mode.</span></cite> By Dryden, first produced in 1672. In
- <cite>The Examiner</cite> this note forms part of the text. At the end of the passage
- quoted Hazlitt proceeds: ‘The whole of Colley Cibber’s work is very amusing to a dramatic
- amateur. It gives an interesting account of the progress of the stage, which in his time
- appears to have been in a state <em>militant</em>. Two actors, <em>Kynaston</em> and
- <em>Montfort</em> were run through the body in disputes with gentlemen, with impunity;
- and the Master of the Revels arrested any of the two companies who was refractory to the
- managers, at his pleasure. <em>Dogget</em> was brought up in this manner from Norwich, by
- two constables: but <em>Dogget</em> being a whig, and a surly fellow, got a
- <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Habeas Corpus</span></i>, and the Master of the Revels was driven from the field.’
- Edward Kynaston (1640–1706) was beaten more than once at the instance of Sir Charles
- Sedley whom he impersonated on the stage. For the story of the Lord Chamberlain and
- Dogget, see Cibber’s <cite>Apology</cite> (Chap. x.).
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_158'>158</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Sir Harry Wildair.</em> Farquhar’s <cite>Sir Harry Wildair</cite>, a continuation of
- <cite>The Constant Couple</cite>, was produced in 1701.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<cite>The Jew that Shakespeare drew.</cite>’ This is an exclamation (attributed to Pope)
- overheard at one of Macklin’s representations of Shylock.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>As often as we are pleased.</em> The following passage from <cite>The Examiner</cite>
- is omitted by Hazlitt: ‘We have no curiosity about things or persons that we never heard
- of. Mr. Coleridge professes in his Lay Sermon to have discovered a new faculty, by which
- he can divine the future. This is lucky for himself and his friends, who seem to have
- lost all recollection of the past.’ Hazlitt here refers to <cite>The Statesman’s Manual;
- or, The Bible the best guide to political skill and foresight: A Lay Sermon, addressed to
- the Higher Classes of Society</cite> (1816), known as the first Lay Sermon. Hazlitt wrote
- two notices of it in <cite>The Examiner</cite>, one of which (September 8, 1816) was
- based merely on newspaper announcements of its forthcoming appearance (see
- <cite>Political Essays</cite>); and probably, as Coleridge believed, reviewed it in the
- <cite>Edinburgh Review</cite> for December 1816.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Players, after all</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> This passage to the end of the paragraph
- is from a ‘Theatrical Examiner,’ January 14, 1816.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Actors have been accused</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> The whole of this paragraph is taken
- from a ‘Theatrical Examiner,’ March 31, 1816.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>The web of our life</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>All’s Well that Ends Well</cite>,
- Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> Scene 3.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_159'>159</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Like the giddy sailor</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Richard III.</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>III.</span> Scene 4.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>A neighbouring country.</em> Hazlitt probably refers to France where the
- disqualifications of actors had only recently been removed by the Revolution government.
- For an account of ecclesiastical intolerance towards actors, especially in France, see
- Lecky’s <cite>The Rise and Influence of Rationalism in Europe</cite>, <span
- class='fss'>II.</span> 316 <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">et seq.</span></i>
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>A consummation</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Hamlet</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>III.</span> Scene 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>The wine of life</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Macbeth</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>II.</span> Scene 3.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_160'>160</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Hurried from fierce extremes</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i>
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in24'>‘——and feel by turns the bitter change</div>
- <div class='line'>Of fierce extremes, extremes by change more fierce,’ etc.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in28'><cite>Paradise Lost</cite>, <span class='fss'>II.</span> 599 <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">et seq.</span></i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>The strolling player in ‘Gil Blas.’</em> <cite>Gil Blas</cite>, Liv. <span
- class='fss'>II.</span> Chap. viii.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>WHY THE ARTS ARE NOT PROGRESSIVE: A FRAGMENT</h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>In <cite>The Morning Chronicle</cite> for January 11 and 15, 1814, Hazlitt published two
-papers entitled ‘Fragments on Art. Why the Arts are not progressive?’ Later in
-the year he contributed two papers to <cite>The Champion</cite> (August 28, 1814, and
-September 11, 1814) under the heading ‘Fine Arts. Whether they are promoted
-by Academies and Public Institutions?’ and in a letter (October 2) replied to the
-criticisms of a correspondent. The present ‘Fragment’ is composed of (1) the first
-of the articles in <cite>The Morning Chronicle</cite> and part of the second, and (2) part of the
-second article in <cite>The Champion</cite>. Much of the matter of the present essay is embodied
-in Hazlitt’s article on the Fine Arts, contributed to the <cite>Encyclopædia Britannica</cite>.</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt>PAGE<span class='pageno' id='Page_442'>442</span></dt>
- <dd>&nbsp;
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_160'>160</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>It is often made a subject</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> The first three paragraphs are
- taken from <cite>The Morning Chronicle</cite>, January 11, 1814. In <cite>The
- Champion</cite> for August 28, 1814, the first two paragraphs appear as a quotation from
- a ‘contemporary critic.’
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Antæus.</em> The story of Antæus the giant is referred to by Milton (<cite>Paradise
- Regained</cite>, <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 563 <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">et seq.</span></i>).
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_161'>161</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Nothing is more contrary</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> This paragraph and part of the next
- are repeated at the beginning of the Lecture on Shakspeare and Milton in <cite>Lectures
- on the English Poets</cite>.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_162'>162</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Guido.</em> Substituted for Claude Lorraine, upon whom, in <cite>The Morning
- Chronicle</cite>, Hazlitt has the following note: ‘In speaking thus of Claude, we yield
- rather to common opinion than to our own. However inferior the style of his best
- landscapes may be, there is something in the execution that redeems all defects. In taste
- and grace nothing can ever go beyond them. He might be called, if not the perfect, the
- faultless painter. Sir Joshua Reynolds used to say, that there would be another Raphael,
- before there was another Claude. In Mr. Northcote’s Dream of a Painter (see his
- <cite>Memoirs of Sir Joshua Reynolds</cite>), there is an account of Claude Lorraine, so
- full of feeling, so picturesque, so truly classical, so like Claude, that we cannot
- resist this opportunity of copying it out.’ The passage quoted from Northcote is the
- paragraph beginning, ‘Now tired with pomp and splendid shew.’ See Northcote’s Varieties
- on Art (The Dream of a Painter) in his <cite>Memoirs of Sir Joshua Reynolds</cite>,
- <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> (1813–1815) p. xvi.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>The human face divine.</em>’ <cite>Paradise Lost</cite>, <span
- class='fss'>III.</span> 44.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Circled Una’s angel face</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>The Faerie Queene</cite>,
- Book <span class='fss'>I.</span> Canto iii. st. 4.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Griselda.</em> See <cite>The Canterbury Tales</cite> (The Clerk’s Tale).
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><cite>The Flower and the Leaf.</cite> This poem, a great favourite of Hazlitt’s, is not
- now attributed to Chaucer.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_163'>163</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>The divine story of the Hawk.</em> <cite>The Decameron</cite> (Fifth Day, Novel <span
- class='fss'>IX.</span>). Hazlitt continually refers to the story.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Isabella.</em> <cite>The Decameron</cite> (Fourth Day, Novel <span
- class='fss'>V.</span>).
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>So Lear</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>King Lear</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>II.</span> Scene 4.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Titian.</em> The picture referred to is one of those which Hazlitt copied while he
- was studying in the Louvre in 1802. See <cite>Memoirs of William Hazlitt</cite>, <span
- class='fss'>I.</span> 88. He frequently mentions it.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Nicolas Poussin.</em> ‘But, above all, who shall celebrate, in terms of fit praise,
- his picture of the shepherds in the Vale of Tempe going out in a fine morning of the
- spring, and coming to a tomb with this inscription:—<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Et ego in Arcadia vixi!</span>’
- (<cite>Table Talk</cite>, ‘On a Landscape of Nicolas Poussin.’)
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>In general, it must happen</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> The two concluding paragraphs are
- taken from <cite>The Champion</cite>, September 11, 1814.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Current with the world.</em> The following passage in <cite>The Champion</cite> is
- here omitted: ‘Common sense, which has been sometimes appealed to as the criterion of
- taste, is nothing but the common capacity, applied to common facts and feelings; but it
- neither is nor pretends to be, the judge of anything else. To suppose that it can really
- appreciate the excellence of works of high art, is as absurd as to suppose that it could
- produce them.’
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Count Castiglione.</em> Baldassare Count Castiglione (1478–1529), whose famous
- <cite>Il Cortegiano</cite> was translated into English by Sir Thomas Hoby under the title
- of ‘The Courtyer’ (1561).
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_443'>443</span>
- <h3 class='c010'>CHARACTERS OF SHAKESPEAR’S PLAYS</h3>
-</div>
-
- <dl class='dl_1 c004'>
- <dt>PAGE</dt>
- <dd>&nbsp;
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_171'>171</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>It is observed by Mr. Pope.</em> Ed. Elwin and Courthope, vol. <span
- class='fss'>X.</span> pp. 534–535.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>A gentleman of the name of Mason.</em> Neither George Mason (1735–1806), author of
- <cite>An Essay on Design in Gardening</cite>, 1768, nor John Monck Mason (1726–1809),
- Shakespearian commentator, is the author of the work alluded to by Hazlitt, but Thomas
- Whately (<em>d.</em> 1772) whose <cite>Remarks on some of the Characters of
- Shakespere</cite> was published after Thomas Whately’s death by his brother, the Rev.
- Jos. Whately, in 1785, as ‘by the author of <cite>Observations on Modern
- Gardening</cite>’ [1770]; a second edition was published in 1808 with the author’s name
- on the title-page, and a third in 1839, edited by Archbishop Whately, Thomas Whately’s
- nephew.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><cite>Richardson’s Essays.</cite> <cite>Essays on Shakespeare’s Dramatic
- Characters.</cite> 1774–1812. By William Richardson (1743–1814).
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><cite>Schlegel’s Lectures on the Drama.</cite> <cite>A Course of Lectures on Dramatic Art
- and Literature.</cite> By A. W. von Schlegel. Delivered at Vienna in 1808. English
- translation, by John Black, in 1815. The quotation which follows will be found in Bohn’s
- one vol. edition, 1846, pp. 363–371, and the further references given in these notes are
- to the same edition.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_174'>174</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>to do a great right.</em>’ <cite>Mer. Ven.</cite> <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>alone is high fantastical.</em>’ <cite>Twelfth Night</cite>, <span
- class='fss'>I.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_175'>175</a>.</dt>
- <dd><cite>Dr. Johnson’s Preface to his Edition of Shakespear.</cite> 1765.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>swelling figures.</em>’ Dr. Johnson’s <cite>Preface</cite>. See Malone’s
- <cite>Shakespeare</cite>, 1821, vol. i. p. 75.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_176'>176</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Dover cliff in</em> <span class='sc'>Lear</span>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 6.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>flowers in</em> <span class='sc'>The Winter’s Tale</span>, Act <span
- class='fss'>IV.</span> 4.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Congreve’s description of a ruin in the</em> <span class='sc'>Mourning Bride</span>,
- Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_177'>177</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>the sleepy eye of love.</em> Cf. ‘The sleepy eye that spoke the melting soul.’ Pope,
- <cite>Imit. 1st Epis. 2nd. Bk. Horace</cite>, l. 150.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>In his tragic scenes.</em> Dr. Johnson’s <cite>Preface</cite>, p. 71.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>His declamations</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Ibid.</span></i>, p. 75.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>But the admirers</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Ibid.</span></i>, p. 75.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_178'>178</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>in another work, The Round Table.</em> See pp. 61–64.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>CYMBELINE</h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>When the name of the Play is not given it is to be understood that the reference is to the
-Play under discussion. Differences between the text quoted by Hazlitt and the text of the
-<cite>Globe</cite> Shakespeare which seem worth pointing out are indicated in square brackets.</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt>PAGE</dt>
- <dd>&nbsp;
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_179'>179</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Dr. Johnson is of opinion.</em> Dr. Johnson’s <cite>Preface</cite>, p. 73.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_180'>180</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Cibber, in speaking of the early English stage.</em> <cite>Apology for the Life of
- Mr. Colley Cibber</cite> (1740), vol. i. chap. iv.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_181'>181</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>My lord</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 6.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>What cheer</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 4. The six following quotations in
- the text are in the same scene.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_182'>182</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>My dear lord</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 6.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>And when with wild wood-leaves</em> and <em>with fairest flowers</em>, Act <span
- class='fss'>IV.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_183'>183</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Cytherea, how bravely</em>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Me of my lawful pleasure</em>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 5.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><span class='pageno' id='Page_444'>444</span><em>Whose love-suit</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 4.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>the ancient critic</em>, Aristophanes of Byzantium.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_184'>184</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Out of your proof</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_185'>185</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>The game’s a-foot</em> [is up], Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>under the shade.</em> <cite>As You Like It</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 7.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>See, boys!</em> Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Nay, Cadwell</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_186'>186</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Stick to your journal course</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>creatures</em> and <em>Your Highness</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 5.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>MACBETH</h4>
-
- <dl class='dl_1 c004'>
- <dt><a href='#Page_186'>186</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>The poet’s eye.</em> <cite>A Midsummer Night’s Dream</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>V.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>your only <em>tragedy-maker</em>. It would be better to italicise only ‘tragedy’; the
- reference is probably to <cite>Hamlet</cite>, <span class='fss'>III.</span> 2, ‘your only
- jig-maker.’
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>the air</em> [heaven’s breath] <em>smells wooingly</em> and <em>the temple-haunting
- martlet builds</em> [does approve by his loved mansionry], Act <span
- class='fss'>I.</span> 6.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_187'>187</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>the blasted heath</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>air-drawn dagger</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 4.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>gracious Duncan</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>blood-boultered Banquo</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>What are these</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>bends up</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 7.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>The deed</em> [The attempt and not the deed confounds us], Act <span
- class='fss'>II.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>preter</em> [super] <em>natural solicitings</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_188'>188</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Bring forth</em> and <em>screw his courage</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 7.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>lost so poorly</em> and <em>a little water</em>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>the sides of his intent</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 7.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>for their future days</em> and <em>his fatal entrance</em>, Act <span
- class='fss'>I.</span> 5.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Come all you spirits</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 5.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_189'>189</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Duncan comes there</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 5. The two following
- quotations in the text are in the same scene.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Mrs. Siddons.</em> Sarah Siddons (1755–1831). It was as Lady Macbeth that Mrs.
- Siddons made her ‘last’ appearance on the stage, June 29, 1812. She returned
- occasionally, and Hazlitt saw her act the part at Covent Garden, June 7, 1817. See note
- to p. 156, and also Hazlitt’s <cite>A View of the English Stage</cite>.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_190'>190</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>There is no art</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 4.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>How goes the night</em>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Light thickens</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 2–3.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_191'>191</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>So fair and foul</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Such welcome and unwelcome news together</em> [things at once] and <em>Men’s
- lives</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Look like the innocent flower</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 5.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>To him and all</em> [all and him], <cite>Avaunt</cite>, and <em>himself again</em>,
- Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 4.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>he may sleep</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Then be thou jocund</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Had he not resembled</em>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>they should be women</em>, and <em>in deeper consequence</em>, Act <span
- class='fss'>I.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_192'>192</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Why stands Macbeth</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>the milk of human kindness</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 5.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>himself alone.</em> <cite>The Third Part of King Henry VI.</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>V.</span> 6.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>For Banquo’s issue</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 1.
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_445'>445</span></div>
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_193'>193</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Duncan is in his grave</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>direness is thus rendered familiar</em>, Act <span class='fss'>V.</span> 5.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>is troubled</em>, Act <span class='fss'>V.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>subject</em> [servile] <em>to all the skyey influences</em>. <cite>Measure for
- Measure</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>My way of life</em>, Act <span class='fss'>V.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_194'>194</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>the ‘Beggar’s Opera,’</em> by John Gay (1685–1732), first acted January 29, 1728. See
- <cite>The Round Table</cite>, pp. 65–66.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Lillo’s murders.</em> George Lillo, dramatist (1693–1739), author of <cite>Fatal
- Curiosity</cite> and <cite>George Barnwell</cite>. See note to p. 154.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Lamb’s Specimens of Early [English] Dramatic Poets</em>, 1808. See Gollancz’s
- edition, 2 vols., 1893, vol. <span class='fss'>I.</span> pp. 271–272.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><cite>the Witch of Middleton.</cite> Thomas Middleton (?1570–1627). It is not known
- whether the date of the <cite>Witch</cite> is earlier or later than that of
- <cite>Macbeth</cite>.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>JULIUS CÆSAR</h4>
-
- <dl class='dl_1 c004'>
- <dt><a href='#Page_195'>195</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>the celebrated Earl of Hallifax.</em> Charles Montague, Earl of Halifax (1661–1715),
- poet and statesman. <cite>King and no King</cite>, licensed 1611, printed 1619;
- <cite>Secret Love, or, the Maiden Queen</cite>, first acted 1667, printed the following
- year.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Thou art a cobler</em> [but with awl. I] and <em>Wherefore rejoice</em>, Act <span
- class='fss'>I.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_196'>196</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>once upon a raw</em> and <em>The games are done</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span>
- 2.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_197'>197</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>And for Mark Antony</em>, and <em>O, name him not</em>, Act <span
- class='fss'>II.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_198'>198</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>This disturbed sky</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>All the conspirators</em>, Act <span class='fss'>V.</span> 5.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>How ‘scaped I killing</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>You are my true</em>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_199'>199</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>They are all welcome</em> and <em>It is no matter</em>, Act <span
- class='fss'>II.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>OTHELLO</h4>
-
- <dl class='dl_1 c004'>
- <dt><a href='#Page_200'>200</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>tragedy purifies the affections by terror and pity</em>, Aristotle’s
- <cite>Poetics</cite>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>It comes directly home</em>, Dedication to Bacon’s <cite>Essays</cite>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>The picturesque contrasts.</em> The germ of this paragraph may be found in <cite>The
- Examiner</cite> (<cite>The Round Table</cite>, No. 38), May 12th, 1816. The paper there
- indexed as <em>Shakespeare’s exact discrimination of nearly similar characters</em> was
- used in the preparation of <cite>Othello</cite>, <cite>Henry IV.</cite> and <cite>Henry
- VI.</cite> in the <cite>Characters of Shakespear’s Plays</cite>.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_202'>202</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>flows on to the Propontic</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>the spells</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>What! Michael Cassio?</em> and <em>If she be false</em>, Act <span
- class='fss'>III.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_203'>203</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Look where he comes</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 3. The four following
- quotations in the text and footnote are in the same scene.
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>[I found not Cassio’s kisses</div>
- <div class='line'>... thy hollow cell.]</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Yet, oh the pity of it</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>My wife!</em> Act <span class='fss'>V.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_204'>204</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>his whole course of love</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>’Tis not to make me jealous</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Believe me</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 4.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>I will, my Lord</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_205'>205</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>her visage.</em> Cf. ‘I saw Othello’s visage in his mind,’ Act <span
- class='fss'>I.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>A maiden never bold</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Tempests themselves</em>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 1.
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_446'>446</span></div>
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_205'>205</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>She is subdued</em> and <em>honours and his valiant parts</em>, Act <span
- class='fss'>I.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Ay, too gentle</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>remained at home</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Alas, Iago</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_206'>206</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Would you had never seen him</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Some persons.</em> See <cite>The Round Table</cite>, p. 15.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_207'>207</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Our ancient</em>, Dram. Per. ‘Iago, his ancient.’
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>What a full fortune</em>, and <em>Here is her father’s house</em>, Act <span
- class='fss'>I.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_208'>208</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>I cannot believe</em>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>And yet how nature</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>the milk of human kindness.</em> <cite>Macbeth</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>I.</span> 5.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>relish of salvation.</em> <cite>Hamlet</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Oh, you are well tuned now</em>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>My noble lord</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_209'>209</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>O grace! O Heaven forgive</em> [defend] <em>me</em>, Act <span
- class='fss'>III.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>How is it, General</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Zanga.</em> See <cite>The Revenge</cite>, by Edward Young (1683–1765), first acted
- 1721.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>TIMON OF ATHENS</h4>
-
- <dl class='dl_1 c004'>
- <dt><a href='#Page_210'>210</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Follow his strides</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_211'>211</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>What, think’st thou</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 3 [moss’d trees].
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>A thing slipt</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Ugly all over with hypocrisy.</em> Cf. ‘He is ugly all over with the affectation of
- the fine gentleman.’ Quoted by Steele from Wycherley, <cite>The Tatler</cite>, No. 38.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_212'>212</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>This yellow slave</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Let me look</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_213'>213</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>What things in the world</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>loved few things better</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Come not to me</em>, Act <span class='fss'>V.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>These well express</em>, Act <span class='fss'>V.</span> 4.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>CORIOLANUS</h4>
-
- <dl class='dl_1 c004'>
- <dt><a href='#Page_214'>214</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>no jutting frieze</em> and <em>to make its pendant bed</em>. <cite>Macbeth</cite>,
- Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 6.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>it carries noise</em>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Carnage is its daughter.</em> See Wordsworth’s <cite>Ode</cite>, No. <span
- class='fss'>XLV.</span> of Poems dedicated to National Independence and Liberty, ed.
- Hutchinson, 1895. The line was altered by Wordsworth in 1845. See also Byron’s <cite>Don
- Juan</cite>, Canto viii. Stanza 9.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_215'>215</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>poor</em> [these] <em>rats</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>as if he were a God</em>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Mark you</em> and <em>cares</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_216'>216</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Now the red pestilence</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_217'>217</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Methinks I hither hear</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 3 [At Grecian sword,
- contemning].
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>These are the ushers</em>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Pray now, no more</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 9.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_218'>218</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>The whole history.</em> The sentence quoted is by Pope. See Malone’s
- <cite>Shakespeare</cite>, 1821, vol. xiv.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>TROILUS AND CRESSIDA</h4>
-
- <dl class='dl_1 c004'>
- <dt><a href='#Page_221'>221</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Troy, yet upon her basis</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_222'>222</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>without o’erflowing full.</em> Said of the Thames in <cite>Cooper’s Hill</cite>, by
- Sir John Denham (1615–1669).
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_447'>447</span></div>
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_222'>222</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>of losing distinction in his thoughts</em> [joys] and <em>As doth a battle</em>, Act
- <span class='fss'>III.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_223'>223</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Time hath, my lord</em>, Act. <span class='fss'>III.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_224'>224</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Why there you touch’d</em>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Come here about me</em>, Act <span class='fss'>V.</span> 7.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Go thy way</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>It is the prettiest villain</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_225'>225</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>the web of our lives.</em> <cite>All’s Well that Ends Well</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>IV.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>He hath done</em>, Act <span class='fss'>V.</span> 5.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_226'>226</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Prouder than when</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>like the eye of vassalage</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 2 [like vassalage
- at unawares encountering the eye of majesty].
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>And as the new abashed nightingale</em>, Chaucer’s <cite>Troilus and Criseyde</cite>,
- Book <span class='fss'>III.</span> 177.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_227'>227</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Her armes small.</em> <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Ibid.</span></i>, 179.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>O that I thought</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Rouse yourself</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>What proffer’st thou</em>, Chaucer’s <cite>Troilus and Criseyde</cite>, Book <span
- class='fss'>III.</span> 209.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA</h4>
-
- <dl class='dl_1 c004'>
- <dt><a href='#Page_228'>228</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>like the swan’s down-feather</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>If it be love indeed</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_229'>229</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>The barge she sat in</em>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>like a doating mallard</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 10.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>He’s speaking now</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 5.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>It is my birthday</em> and <em>To let a fellow</em>, Act. <span
- class='fss'>III.</span> 13.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Age cannot wither</em>, Act. <span class='fss'>II.</span> 2 [stale].
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>There’s gold</em>, Act. <span class='fss'>II.</span> 5.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_230'>230</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Dost thou not see</em>, Act <span class='fss'>V.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Antony, leave thy lascivious wassels</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 4.
- [<em>For</em> Mutina <em>read</em> Modena.]
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Yes, yes</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 11.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_231'>231</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Eros, thou yet behold’st me</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 14.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>I see men’s judgments</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 13.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_232'>232</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>a master-leaver</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 9.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>HAMLET</h4>
-
- <dl class='dl_1 c004'>
- <dt><a href='#Page_232'>232</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>this goodly frame</em> and <em>man delighted not</em>, Act <span
- class='fss'>II.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>too much i’ th’ sun.</em> Cf. Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>the pangs of despised love</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_233'>233</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>the outward pageants.</em> Cf. the trappings and the suits of woe, Act <span
- class='fss'>I.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>we have that within</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_234'>234</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>that has no relish of salvation</em> and <em>He kneels and prays</em> [now might I do
- it pat, now he is praying], Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>How all occasions</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 4 [fust in us].
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_235'>235</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Whole Duty of Man</em>, 1659, a once-popular ethical treatise of unknown authorship.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><cite>Academy of Compliments, or the whole Art of Courtship, being the rarest and most
- exact way of wooing a Maid or Widow, by the way of Dialogue or complimental
- Expressions.</cite> London, 12mo. Academies of Compliments were also published in 1655
- and 1669.
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_448'>448</span></div>
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_236'>236</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>his father’s spirit</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>I loved Ophelia</em> and <em>Sweets to the sweet</em>, Act <span
- class='fss'>V.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Oh rose of May</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 5.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>There is a willow</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 7 [grows aslant].
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_237'>237</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>a wave o’ th’ sea.</em> <cite>The Winter’s Tale</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>IV.</span> 4.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>THE TEMPEST</h4>
-
- <dl class='dl_1 c004'>
- <dt><a href='#Page_238'>238</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Either for tragedy.</em> <cite>Hamlet</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 2.
- Hazlitt alters the words of Polonius to apply them to Shakespeare.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>a deed without a name.</em> <cite>Macbeth</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>does his spiriting gently</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>to airy nothing.</em> <cite>A Midsummer Night’s Dream</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>V.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>semblably.</em> <cite>The Second Part of King Henry VI.</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>V.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>worthy of that name.</em> Cf. Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_239'>239</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>like the dyer’s hand.</em> <em>Sonnet</em> <span class='fss'>CXI.</span>
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>the liberty of wit</em>’ ... <em>‘the law’ of the understanding</em>. Cf.
- <cite>Hamlet</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 2 [the law of writ and the liberty].
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>of the earth, earthy.</em> <cite>St. John</cite>, iii. 31.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>always speaks in blank verse</em>, Schlegel, p. 395.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>As wicked dew</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_240'>240</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>I’ll shew thee</em>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Be not afraid</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_241'>241</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>I drink the air</em>, Act <span class='fss'>V.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>I’ll put a girdle</em>, <cite>A Midsummer Night’s Dream</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>II.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Your charm</em>, Act <span class='fss'>V.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Come unto these yellow sands</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_242'>242</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>The cloud-capp’d towers</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Ye elves of hills</em>, Act <span class='fss'>V.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_243'>243</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Shakespear has anticipated.</em> The passage quoted is based on Florio’s translation
- of Montaigne. See Chapter <span class='fss'>XXX.</span> Book 1. <em>Of the
- Caniballes</em>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Had I the plantation</em>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>THE MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM</h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>See <cite>The Round Table</cite>, pp. 61–64.</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt><a href='#Page_244'>244</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>This crew of patches</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>He will roar</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 2. The two following quotations in
- the text are in the same scene.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>I believe we must leave</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_245'>245</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Write me a prologue</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>with amiable cheeks</em> and <em>Monsieur Cobweb</em>, Act <span
- class='fss'>IV.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Lord, what fools</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>the human mortals</em>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>gorgons and hydras.</em> <cite>Paradise Lost</cite>, Book <span
- class='fss'>II.</span> l. 628.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>regarded him rather as a metaphysician.</em> Cf. ‘No man was ever yet a great poet,
- without being at the same time a profound philosopher.’ Coleridge’s <cite>Biographia
- Literaria</cite>, Chap. <span class='fss'>XV.</span>
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_246'>246</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Be kind</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Go, one of you</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_247'>247</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>the most fearful wild-fowl</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 1.
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_449'>449</span></div>
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_247'>247</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Liston</em> acted in <cite>A Midsummer Night’s Dream</cite> at Covent Garden, January
- 17, 1816. See Genest’s <cite>Some Account of the English Stage</cite>, <span
- class='fss'>VIII.</span> 545–549. See also Hazlitt’s <cite>A View of the English
- Stage</cite>, where a few of the same sentences used here also occur.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>ROMEO AND JULIET</h4>
-
- <dl class='dl_1 c004'>
- <dt><a href='#Page_248'>248</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>whatever is most intoxicating</em>, Schlegel, p. 400.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>fancies</em> [cowslips] <em>wan</em>. <em>Lycidas</em>, l. 147.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_249'>249</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>We have heard it objected.</em> By Curran. See <em>post</em>, p. 393.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>too unripe and crude.</em> Cf. <em>Lycidas</em>, l. 3, ‘harsh and crude.’
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>the</em> <span class='sc'>Stranger</span>. <cite><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Menschenhass und Reue</span></cite>,
- by A.F.F. von Kotzebue (1761–1819), adapted for the English stage under the title of
- <cite>The Stranger</cite>. See note to p. 155.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>gather grapes.</em> <cite>St. Matthew</cite>, vii. 16.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>My bounty</em>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_250'>250</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>they fade by degrees</em>, Wordsworth’s Ode, <cite>Intimations of Immortality from
- Recollections of early Childhood</cite>, <span class='fss'>V.</span> [fade into the
- light].
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>that lies about us.</em> <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Ibid.</span></i>
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_251'>251</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>the purple light of love</em>, Gray’s <cite>Progress of Poesy</cite>, l. 41.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>another morn risen on mid-day</em> [mid-noon], <cite>Paradise Lost</cite>, <span
- class='fss'>V.</span> 310–311.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>in utter nakedness</em>, Wordsworth’s <cite>Ode</cite> (see above), <span
- class='fss'>V.</span>
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>I’ve seen the day</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 5.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>At my poor house</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>But he</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_252'>252</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>the white wonder</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>What lady’s that</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 5.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>But stronger Shakespear felt for man alone</em>, Collins’s <cite>Epistle to Sir
- Thomas Hanmer</cite>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Thou know’st the mask</em>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_253'>253</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>calls</em> [think] <em>true love spoken</em> [acted] and <em>Gallop apace</em>, Act
- <span class='fss'>III.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>It was reserved</em>, Schlegel, p. 400.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_254'>254</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Here comes the lady</em>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 6.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Ancient damnation</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 5.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>frail thoughts.</em> <em>Lycidas</em>, 153 [false surmise].
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>the flatteries</em>, Act <span class='fss'>V.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>What said my man</em>, Act <span class='fss'>V.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>If I may trust</em>, Act <span class='fss'>V.</span> 1 [flattering truth of sleep].
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_255'>255</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Shame come to Romeo</em> and <em>Blister’d be thy tongue</em>, Act <span
- class='fss'>III.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_256'>256</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>father, mother</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Let me peruse</em>, Act <span class='fss'>V.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_257'>257</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>as she would take</em> [catch]. <cite>Antony and Cleopatra</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>V.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><cite>The Beauties of Shakespear.</cite> By Dr. Wm. Dodd (1729–1777), 1753.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>LEAR</h4>
-
- <dl class='dl_1 c004'>
- <dt><a href='#Page_258'>258</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Be Kent unmannerly</em> and <em>Prescribe not</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_259'>259</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>This is the excellent foppery</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>the dazzling fence of controversy.</em> Cf. the ‘dazzling fence’ of rhetoric,
- <cite>Comus</cite>, 790–791.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_260'>260</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>beat at the gate, he has made</em> and <em>Let me not stay</em>, Act <span
- class='fss'>I.</span> 4.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>How now, daughter.</em> <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Ibid.</span></i> [much o’ the savour].
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_263'>263</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>O let me not be mad</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 5.
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_450'>450</span></div>
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_264'>264</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Vengeance</em> and <em>Good-morrow to you both</em>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span>
- 4 [how this becomes the house].
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_268'>268</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>See the little dogs</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 6.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Let them anatomise Regan</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 6.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Nothing but his unkind daughters</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 4.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>whether a madman</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 6.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Come on, sir</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 6.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>full circle home</em>, Act <span class='fss'>V.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_269'>269</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Shame, ladies</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Alack, ’tis he</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 4.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>How does my royal lord</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 7.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>We are not the first</em>, Act <span class='fss'>V.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_270'>270</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>And my poor fool</em>, Act <span class='fss'>V.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Vex not his ghost</em>, Act <span class='fss'>V.</span> 3 [this tough world].
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Approved of by Dr. Johnson.</em> See Malone’s <cite>Shakespeare</cite>, vol. <span
- class='fss'>X.</span> p. 290.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>condemned by Schlegel.</em> See Schlegel, p. 413.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><cite>The Lear of Shakespear.</cite> See Lamb’s <cite>Miscellaneous Essays</cite>, ed.
- Ainger, 1884, p. 233.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_271'>271</a>.</dt>
- <dd>[<em>For</em> that rich sea <em>read</em> that sea.]
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>RICHARD II.</h4>
-
- <dl class='dl_1 c004'>
- <dt><a href='#Page_273'>273</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>How long a time</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>sighed his English breath</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>The language I have learnt</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>is hung armour</em>, Wordsworth’s Sonnet, <cite>It is not to be thought of</cite>
- (1802).
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>keen encounters.</em> <cite>King Richard III.</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span>
- 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>If that thy valour</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 1 [Till thou the lie-giver
- and that lie do lie].
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_275'>275</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>This royal throne of kings</em>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 1 [fear’d by their
- breed and famous by their birth ... the envious siege].
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_276'>276</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Ourself and Bushy</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 4.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>I thank thee</em>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>O that I were a mockery king</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>it yearned his heart</em>, Act <span class='fss'>V.</span> 5.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>My lord, you told me</em>, Act <span class='fss'>V.</span> 2 [scowl on gentle
- Richard].
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>HENRY IV.</h4>
-
- <dl class='dl_1 c004'>
- <dt><a href='#Page_278'>278</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>we behold the fulness.</em> Cf. <em>Col.</em> ii. 9.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>lards the lean earth.</em> <cite>1 King Henry IV.</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>II.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>into thin air.</em> <cite>The Tempest</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>three fingers</em> [omit <em>deep</em>], Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>it snows of meat and drink.</em> <cite>Canterbury Tales</cite>, Prologue, 345.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>ascends me into the brain</em>, Part II. Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>a sun of man</em>, Part I. Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 4.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_279'>279</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>open, palpable</em>, Part I. Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 4 [like their father
- that begets them; gross as a mountain, open, palpable].
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>By the lord</em>, Part I. Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_280'>280</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>But Hal</em>, Part I. Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>who grew from four</em> [two] <em>men</em>, Part I. Act <span class='fss'>II.</span>
- 4.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_281'>281</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Harry, I do not only marvel</em>, Part I. Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 4 [purses?
- a question to be asked].
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_451'>451</span></div>
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_282'>282</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>What is the gross sum</em> and <em>Marry, if thou wert an honest man</em>, Part II.
- Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_283'>283</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Would I were with him.</em> <cite>Henry V.</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>turning his vices</em> [diseases], Part II. Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>their legs</em>, Part II. Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 4.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>a man made after supper</em> and <em>Would, cousin Silence</em>, Part II. Act <span
- class='fss'>III.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>I did not think Master Silence, in some authority</em>, and <em>You have here</em>,
- Part II. Act <span class='fss'>V.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_284'>284</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>When on the gentle Severn’s sedgy bank</em> and <em>By heaven</em> [honour from the
- pale-faced moon], Part I. Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Had my sweet Harry</em>, Part II. Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>HENRY V.</h4>
-
- <dl class='dl_1 c004'>
- <dt>PAGE</dt>
- <dd>&nbsp;
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_285'>285</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>the</em> [best] <em>king of good fellows</em>, Act <span class='fss'>V.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>plume up their wills.</em> <cite>Othello</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>the right divine</em>, Pope’s <cite>Dunciad</cite>, Book <span class='fss'>IV.</span>
- 1. 188.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_286'>286</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>when France is his</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>O for a muse of fire</em>, Prologue.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_287'>287</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>the reformation and which is a wonder</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>And God forbid</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_288'>288</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>the ill neighbourhood</em>, <em>For once the eagle England</em>, and <em>For
- government</em> [the act of order], Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_289'>289</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>rich with</em> [omit <em>his</em>] <em>praise</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>O hard condition</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_290'>290</a>.</dt>
- <dd><cite>The Duke of York</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 6.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_291'>291</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>some disputations</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>HENRY VI.</h4>
-
- <dl class='dl_1 c004'>
- <dt><a href='#Page_292'>292</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>flat and unraised.</em> <cite>King Henry V.</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span>,
- Chorus.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Glory is like a circle</em>, Part I. Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>yet tell’st thou not</em>, Part I. Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 4.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_293'>293</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Aye, Edward will use women honourably</em>, Part III. Act <span
- class='fss'>III.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>We have already observed.</em> See note to p. 200 for the source of this paragraph.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_294'>294</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>The characters and situations.</em> The material between these words and
- <em>disappointed ambition</em> (p. 297) formed part of an article by Hazlitt in <cite>The
- Examiner</cite> (see note to p. 200).
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><cite>Edward Plantagenet</cite>, Part III. Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>mock not my senseless conjuration.</em> <cite>Richard II.</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>III.</span> 2 [foul rebellion’s arms ... lift shrewd steel ... God for his
- Richard].
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_295'>295</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>But now the blood.</em> <cite>Richard II.</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>cheap defence.</em> Cf. Burke: <em>Reflections on the Revolution in France</em>, ‘the
- cheap defence of nations.’
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Awake, thou coward majesty</em> [twenty thousand names] and <em>Where is the
- duke</em>. <cite>Richard II.</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_296'>296</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>what must the king do now.</em> <cite>Richard II.</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>III.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>This battle fares</em>, Part III. Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 5.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_297'>297</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>had staggered his royal person.</em> <cite>Richard II.</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>V.</span> 5.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_452'>452</span>
- <h4 class='c022'>RICHARD III.</h4>
-</div>
-
- <dl class='dl_1 c004'>
- <dt>PAGE</dt>
- <dd>&nbsp;
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_298'>298</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>the character in which Garrick came out.</em> David Garrick (1717–1779) appeared,
- October 19, 1741, at the theatre in Goodman’s Fields.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>the second character in which Mr. Kean appeared.</em> Edmund Kean (1787–1833)
- appeared at Drury Lane as Shylock, January 26, 1814, on February 1st as Shylock, on
- February 12th as Gloster in Richard III. See <cite>Some Account of the English
- Stage</cite>, Genest, vol. viii. pp. 407–408, 1832. See also Hazlitt’s <cite>A View of
- the English Stage</cite>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>But I was born</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_299'>299</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Cooke.</em> George Frederick Cooke (1756–1811) acted Richard III. at Covent Garden on
- September 20, 1809. See Genest’s <cite>Some Account of the English Stage</cite>, viii. p.
- 178.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_300'>300</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Sir Giles Overreach</em>, in Massinger’s <cite>A New Way to Pay Old Debts</cite>
- (1620–33). For Hazlitt’s criticism of Kean’s acting in this and the other characters
- referred to in the same paragraph see his <cite>A View of the English Stage</cite>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Oroonoko</em>, or the Royal Slave. A play (1696) by Thomas Southerne (1660/1–1746)
- founded on a novel of Aphra Behn’s (1640–1689).
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Cibber.</em> See note to p. 157.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_301'>301</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>bustle in</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>they do me wrong</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 3 [speak fair].
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>I beseech your graces</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_302'>302</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Stay, yet look</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 1 [rude, ragged nurse].
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Dighton and Forrest</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>HENRY VIII.</h4>
-
- <dl class='dl_1 c004'>
- <dt><a href='#Page_303'>303</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Nay, forsooth</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Dr. Johnson observes</em>, Malone’s <cite>Shakespeare</cite>, vol. xix. p. 498.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_304'>304</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Farewell, a long farewell</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>him whom of all men</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>while her grace sat down</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_305'>305</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>No maid could live near such a man.</em> Mr. P. A. Daniel suggests that by a slip
- this remark has been said of Shakespeare instead of Henry VIII. The emendation would make
- the paragraph read thus: ‘It has been said of him [<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">i.e.</span></i> Henry VIII.]—“No
- maid could live near such a man.” It might with as good reason be said of Shakespear—“No
- king could live near such a man.”’
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>the best of kings.</em> A phrase applied to Ferdinand VII. of Spain in official
- documents. See <cite>The Examiner</cite>, September 25, 1814, where the words are
- ironically italicised.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>KING JOHN</h4>
-
- <dl class='dl_1 c004'>
- <dt><a href='#Page_306'>306</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>denoted a foregone conclusion.</em> <cite>Othello</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>III.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>To consider thus.</em> <cite>Hamlet</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>V.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_307'>307</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Heat me these irons</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_310'>310</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>There is not yet</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>To me</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>that love of misery</em> and <em>Oh father Cardinal</em>, Act <span
- class='fss'>III.</span> 4.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_311'>311</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Aliquando.</em> Ben Jonson’s <cite>Discoveries</cite>, <span
- class='fss'>LXIV.</span>, <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">De Shakespeare Nostrati</span></i>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><span class='pageno' id='Page_453'>453</span><em>commodity, tickling commodity</em>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_312'>312</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>That daughter there</em>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 1 [niece to England].
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Therefore to be possessed</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>TWELFTH NIGHT</h4>
-
- <dl class='dl_1 c004'>
- <dt><a href='#Page_314'>314</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>high fantastical</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Wherefore are these things hid</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>rouse the night-owl</em> and <em>Dost thou think</em>, Act <span
- class='fss'>II.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>we cannot agree with Dr. Johnson.</em> See Dr. Johnson’s <cite>Preface</cite>, before
- cited, p. 71.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_315'>315</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>What’s her history</em>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 4.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Oh, it came o’er the ear</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span>, 1 [the sweet sound].
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>They give a very echo</em>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 4.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Blame not this haste</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_316'>316</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>O fellow, come</em>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 4.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Here comes the little villain</em>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 5 [drawn from us
- with cars].
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>THE TWO GENTLEMEN OF VERONA</h4>
-
- <dl class='dl_1 c004'>
- <dt><a href='#Page_318'>318</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>It is observable.</em> The note is by Pope. See Malone’s <cite>Shakespeare</cite>,
- vol. iv. p. 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>This whole scene.</em> Pope’s note is to Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 1. See
- Malone’s <cite>Shakespeare</cite>, vol. iv. p. 13.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Why, how know you</em>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_319'>319</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>I do not seek</em>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 7.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>The river wanders</em> [glideth] <em>at its</em> [his] <em>own sweet will. Sonnet
- composed upon Westminster Bridge</em>, September 3, 1802.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>And sweetest Shakespear.</em> <cite><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">L’Allegro</span></cite>, lines 133–134.
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>[Or sweetest Shakespeare ...</div>
- <div class='line'>Warble....]</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>THE MERCHANT OF VENICE</h4>
-
- <dl class='dl_1 c004'>
- <dt><a href='#Page_320'>320</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Mr. Cumberland.</em> Richard Cumberland (1732–1811), dramatist.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>baited with the rabble’s curse.</em> <cite>Macbeth</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>V.</span> 8.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>a man no less sinned against.</em> Cf. <cite>King Lear</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>III.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>the lodged hate</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>milk of human kindness.</em> <cite>Macbeth</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 5.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Jewish gaberdine</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>lawful</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>on such a day</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_321'>321</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>I am as like</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>To bait fish withal</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>What judgment</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_322'>322</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>I would not have parted</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>civil doctor</em> and <em>On such a night</em>, Act <span class='fss'>V.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>conscience and the fiend</em>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>I hold the world</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 1.
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_454'>454</span></div>
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_323'>323</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>How sweet the moonlight</em>, Act <span class='fss'>V.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Bassanio and old Shylock</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_324'>324</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>’Tis an unweeded garden.</em> <cite>Hamlet</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 2
- [things rank, and gross in nature, possess it merely].
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>THE WINTER’S TALE</h4>
-
- <dl class='dl_1 c004'>
- <dt><a href='#Page_324'>324</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>We wonder that Mr. Pope.</em> See Pope’s <cite>Preface</cite>, Malone’s
- <cite>Shakespeare</cite>, vol. i. p. 15.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Ha’ not you seen</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_325'>325</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Is whispering nothing?</em> Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_326'>326</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Thou dearest Perdita</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 4.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_329'>329</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Even here undone</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 4.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>ALL’S WELL THAT ENDS WELL</h4>
-
- <dl class='dl_1 c004'>
- <dt><a href='#Page_330'>330</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Oh, were that all</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>The soul of this man</em>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 5.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>the bringing off of his drum</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 6 and Act <span
- class='fss'>IV.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_331'>331</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Is it possible</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Yet I am thankful</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Frederigo Alberigi and his Falcon</em>, Boccaccio’s <cite>Decameron</cite>, 5th day,
- 9th story.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_332'>332</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>the story of Isabella.</em> <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Id.</span></i>, 4th day, 5th story.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Tancred and Sigismunda.</em> <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Id.</span></i>, 4th day, 1st story. See also Dryden’s
- <cite>Sigismonda and Guiscardo</cite>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Honoria.</em> <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Id.</span></i>, 5th day, 8th story. See also Dryden’s <cite>Theodore
- and Honoria</cite>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Cimon and Iphigene.</em> <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Id.</span></i>, 5th day, 1st story. See also Dryden’s
- <cite>Cimon and Iphigenia</cite>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Jeronymo.</em> <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Id.</span></i>, 4th day, 8th story.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>the two holiday lovers.</em> <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Id.</span></i>, 4th day, 7th story.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Griselda.</em> <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Id.</span></i>, 10th day, 10th story.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>LOVE’S LABOUR’S LOST</h4>
-
- <dl class='dl_1 c004'>
- <dt><a href='#Page_332'>332</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>the golden cadences of poesy</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>set a mark of reprobation</em>, Pope’s note to <cite>The Two Gentlemen of
- Verona</cite>. Malone’s <cite>Shakespeare</cite>, vol. iv. p. 13.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_333'>333</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>as too picked</em>, Act <span class='fss'>V.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>as light as bird from brake</em> [brier]. <cite>A Midsummer Night’s Dream</cite>, Act
- <span class='fss'>V.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>O! and I forsooth</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 1 [a humorous sigh ... This
- senior-junior].
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_334'>334</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Oft have I heard</em>, Act <span class='fss'>V.</span> 2 [your fruitful brain].
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>the words of Mercury</em>, Act <span class='fss'>V.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING</h4>
-
- <dl class='dl_1 c004'>
- <dt><a href='#Page_335'>335</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Oh, my lord</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>No, Leonato</em>, Act. <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_336'>336</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>She dying</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 1 [the idea of her life].
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>For look where Beatrice</em> and <em>What fire is in mine ears</em>, Act <span
- class='fss'>III.</span> 1.
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_455'>455</span></div>
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_337'>337</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Monsieur Love</em> ... <em>This can be no trick</em>, Act <span
- class='fss'>II.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Disdain and scorn</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>AS YOU LIKE IT</h4>
-
- <dl class='dl_1 c004'>
- <dt><a href='#Page_338'>338</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>fleet the time</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>under the shade</em>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 7.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>who have felt</em>, Cymbeline, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>They hear the tumult</em>, Cowper’s <cite>Task</cite>, <span class='fss'>IV.</span>
- 99–100, ‘I behold the tumult, and am still.’
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_339'>339</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>And this their life</em>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>suck melancholy</em>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 5.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>who morals on the time</em>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 7.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Out of these convertites</em>, Act <span class='fss'>V.</span> 4.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>In heedless mazes.</em> <cite><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">L’Allegro</span></cite>, 141–142.
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>[With wanton heed and giddy cunning,</div>
- <div class='line'>The melting voice through mazes running.]</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>For ever and a day</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_340'>340</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>We still have slept together</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>And how like you</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_341'>341</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Blow, blow</em>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 7.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>an If</em>, Act <span class='fss'>V.</span> 4.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Think not I love him</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 5.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>THE TAMING OF THE SHREW</h4>
-
- <dl class='dl_1 c004'>
- <dt><a href='#Page_342'>342</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Think you a little din</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>I’ll woo her</em>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_343'>343</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Tut, she’s a lamb</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_344'>344</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Good morrow, gentle mistress</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 5.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>The mathematics</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><cite>The Honey-Moon.</cite> A successful play by John Tobin (1770–1804) with a plot
- similar to that of <cite>The Taming of the Shrew</cite>, produced at Drury Lane January
- 31, 1805.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Tranio, I saw her coral lips</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_345'>345</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>I knew a wench</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 4.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Indifferent well</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>for a pot</em> and <em>I am Christopher Sly</em>, Induc. Scene 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><cite>The Slies are no rogues</cite>, Induc. Scene 1.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>MEASURE FOR MEASURE</h4>
-
- <dl class='dl_1 c004'>
- <dt><a href='#Page_345'>345</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>The height of moral argument.</em> ‘The highth of this great argument,’
- <cite>Paradise Lost</cite>, <span class='fss'>I.</span> l. 24.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_346'>346</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>one that apprehends death</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>He has been drinking</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>wretches</em>, Schlegel, p. 387.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>as the flesh</em>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>A bawd, sir?</em> and <em>Go to, sir</em>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 2.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_347'>347</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>there is some soul of goodness.</em> <cite>Henry V.</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>IV.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Let me know the point</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_348'>348</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Reason thus with life</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_456'>456</span>
- <h4 class='c022'>THE MERRY WIVES OF WINDSOR</h4>
-</div>
-
- <dl class='dl_1 c004'>
- <dt>PAGE</dt>
- <dd>&nbsp;
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_349'>349</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>commanded to shew the knight.</em> Cf. Schlegel, p. 427.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_350'>350</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>some faint sparks.</em> <cite>Hamlet</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>V.</span> 1 [your
- flashes ... the table on a roar].
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>to eat.</em> <cite>2 Henry IV.</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>to be no more so familiarity.</em> <cite>2 Henry IV.</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>II.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>an honest</em>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 4.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>very good discretions.</em> Cf. Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>cholers</em>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>THE COMEDY OF ERRORS</h4>
-
- <dl class='dl_1 c004'>
- <dt><a href='#Page_352'>352</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>How long hath this possession</em>, Act <span class='fss'>V.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_353'>353</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>They brought one Pinch</em>, Act <span class='fss'>V.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>DOUBTFUL PLAYS OF SHAKESPEAR</h4>
-
- <dl class='dl_1 c004'>
- <dt><a href='#Page_353'>353</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>All the editors</em>, Schlegel, p. 442.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>at the blackness</em>, Schlegel, see above.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_357'>357</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>a lasting storm.</em> <em>Per.</em>, <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 1 [whirring me from
- my friends].
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h4 class='c022'>POEMS AND SONNETS</h4>
-
- <dl class='dl_1 c004'>
- <dt><a href='#Page_358'>358</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>as broad and casing.</em> <cite>Macbeth</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 4
- [broad and general as the casing air].
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>cooped.</em> Cf. <cite>Macbeth</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> 4 [cabined,
- cribbed, confined].
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>glancing from heaven.</em> <cite>A Midsummer Night’s Dream</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>V.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_359'>359</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Oh! idle words.</em> <cite>Lucrece</cite>, ll. 1016–1122 [Out, idle words, be you
- mediators].
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Round hoof’d.</em> <cite>Venus and Adonis</cite>, ll. 295–300.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>And their heads.</em> <cite>A Midsummer Night’s Dream</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>IV.</span> 1.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_360'>360</a>.</dt>
- <dd><cite>Constancy.</cite> <em>Sonnet</em> <span class='fss'>XXV.</span>
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><cite>Love’s Consolation.</cite> <em>Sonnet</em> <span class='fss'>XXIX.</span>
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><cite>Novelty.</cite> <em>Sonnet</em> <span class='fss'>CII.</span> [stops her pipe].
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_361'>361</a>.</dt>
- <dd><cite>Life’s Decay.</cite> <em>Sonnet</em> <span class='fss'>LXXIII.</span>
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>A LETTER TO WILLIAM GIFFORD, ESQ.</h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>William Gifford (1756–1826), the son of a glazier, after a neglected childhood,
-during which he was at one time apprenticed to a shoemaker, entered Exeter
-College, Oxford, through the kindness of a friend, and graduated in 1782. His
-two satires, <cite>The Baviad</cite> (1791) and <cite>The Mæviad</cite> (1795), were published together in
-1797, and his translation of Juvenal, upon which he had been working since he left
-Oxford, in 1802. He became editor of <cite>The Anti-Jacobin</cite> (1797), and was the first
-editor (1809–1824) of <cite>The Quarterly Review</cite>. He published a translation of Persius
-in 1821, and editions of some of the old dramatists: Massinger (1805), Ben
-Jonson (1816), Ford (1827), and Shirley (completed by Dyce, 1833). In <cite>The
-Examiner</cite> for June 14, 1818, appeared a ‘Literary Notice,’ entitled ‘The Editor of
-the Quarterly Review,’ which Hazlitt incorporated in the present ‘Letter.’</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt><a href='#Page_366'>366</a>.<span class='pageno' id='Page_457'>457</span></dt>
- <dd>‘<em>False and hollow</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Paradise Lost</cite>, <span
- class='fss'>II.</span> 112 <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">et seq.</span></i>
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Ackerman’s dresses for May.</em> Rudolf Ackerman’s (1764–1834) <cite>Repository of
- Arts, Literature, Fashions, Manufactures</cite>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i>, was issued
- periodically between 1809 and 1828.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Carlton House.</em> The residence of the Prince Regent. It was pulled down in 1826.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_367'>367</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>A Jacobin stationer.</em> Hazlitt refers to the case of William Paul Rogers, a
- Chelsea stationer, who for taking an active part in a petition for reform was deprived of
- the charge of a letter-box. Leigh Hunt referred to the case in <cite>The Examiner</cite>
- for February 7, 1819 (not February 9, as Hazlitt says), and opened a subscription list
- for Rogers. The two clergymen referred to took an active part against Rogers. Wellesley,
- a brother of the Duke of Wellington, was Rector of Chelsea, and Butler had a school there.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>The tenth transmitter.</em>’
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘No tenth transmitter of a foolish face.’</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in20'>Richard Savage’s <cite>The Bastard</cite>, l. 7.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_368'>368</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Ultra-Crepidarian.</em> Leigh Hunt published a satire on Gifford entitled
- <cite><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Ultra-Crepidarius</span></cite> in 1823, but the phrase was invented for Gifford,
- Leigh Hunt says in his preface, ‘by a friend of mine ... one of the humblest as well as
- noblest spirits that exist.’ This was perhaps Lamb.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_370'>370</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Your account of the first work.</em> In <cite>The Quarterly Review</cite>, April 1817
- (vol. xvii. p. 154).
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Albemarle Street hoax.</em> John Murray (1778–1843), the founder and publisher of
- <cite>The Quarterly Review</cite>, purchased No. 50 Albemarle Street in 1812.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_372'>372</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Secret, sweet and precious.</em>’
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘The landlady and Tam grew gracious</div>
- <div class='line'>Wi’ secret favours, sweet and precious.’</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in24'>Burns, <cite>Tam o’Shanter</cite>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_373'>373</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Two or three conclusive digs</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> From a passage in Leigh Hunt’s
- essay ‘On Washerwomen’ referred to by Gifford.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>Note. ‘<em>The milk of human kindness.</em>’ <cite>Macbeth</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>I.</span> Scene 5.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_374'>374</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Earl Grosvenor.</em> Gifford was for a time tutor in Lord Grosvenor’s family.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Their gorge did not rise.</em>’ <cite>Hamlet</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>V.</span>
- Scene 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>You assume a vice</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i>
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Assume a virtue, if you have it not.’</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in26'><cite>Hamlet</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> Scene 4.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>In the ‘Examiner.’</em> February 25, 1816.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_375'>375</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>How little knew’st thou of Calista!</em>
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘O, thou hast known but little of Calista!’</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in16'>Rowe’s <cite>The Fair Penitent</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> Scene 1.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Anne Davies.</em> Gifford bequeathed £3000 to her relatives. In addition to the
- epitaph quoted in the text he wrote an elegy on her, beginning, ‘I wish I was where Anna
- lies,’ which is referred to in Hazlitt’s character of Gifford in <cite>The Spirit of the
- Age</cite>.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_376'>376</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Other such dulcet diseases.</em>’ <cite>As You Like It</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>V.</span> Scene 4.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Compunctious visitings of Nature</em>.’ <cite>Macbeth</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>I.</span> Scene 5.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>You are well tuned now</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Othello</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>II.</span> Scene 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Made of penetrable stuff.</em>’ <cite>Hamlet</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>III.</span> Scene 4.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Stuffed with paltry, blurred sheets.</em>’ Burke’s <cite>Reflections on the
- Revolution in France</cite> (<cite>Select Works</cite>, ed. Payne, ii. 101).
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>Note 1. ‘<em>It is easier</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>St. Matthew</cite>, xix. 24.
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_458'>458</span></div>
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_377'>377</a>.</dt>
- <dd><cite>The Admiralty Scribe.</cite> John Wilson Croker (1780–1857), who contributed two
- hundred and sixty articles to <cite>The Quarterly Review</cite>, was Secretary to the
- Admiralty from 1809 to 1830.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>His ‘Feast of the Poets.’</em> Published in 1814.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_378'>378</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Thus painters write their names at Co.</em> From Prior’s <cite>Protogenes</cite> and
- <cite>Apelles</cite>. Burke quoted the line in his <cite>Regicide Peace</cite>
- (<cite>Select Works</cite>, ed. Payne, p. 94).
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>For this passage</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> Leigh Hunt and his brother John were in
- prison for two years from February 1813 for a libel on the Prince Regent in <cite>The
- Examiner</cite> (March 22, 1812). Leigh Hunt was sent, not to Newgate, but to the Surrey
- Gaol in Horsemonger Lane, where he wrote <cite>The Descent of Liberty: A Masque</cite>,
- and the greater part of <cite>The Story of Rimini</cite>. Gifford’s review of
- <em>Rimini</em> appeared in <cite>The Quarterly Review</cite> for Jan. 1816 (vol. xiv. p.
- 473).
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_378'>378</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Yet you say somewhere.</em> In the review of Hazlitt’s <cite>Lectures on the English
- Poets</cite> (<cite>Quarterly Review</cite>, July 1818, vol. xix. at p. 430).
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>Note. <em>Mary Robinson</em> (1758–1800), known as ‘Perdita,’ from her having captivated
- the Prince of Wales while she was acting in that part in 1778. On being deserted by him
- she devoted herself to literature, and became one of the Della Cruscan School ridiculed
- by Gifford. Hazlitt refers to Gifford’s <cite>Baviad</cite>, ll. 27–28:—
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘See Robinson forget her state, and move</div>
- <div class='line'>On crutches tow’rds the grave, to “Light o’ Love.”’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Put on the pannel</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> ‘If I can help it, he shall not be on the
- inquest of my <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">quantum meruit</span></i>.’ Burke’s <cite>A Letter to a Noble Lord</cite>
- (<cite>Works</cite>, Bohn, <span class='fss'>V.</span> 114). Note. <em>Mr. Sheridan once
- spoke.</em> See speech of March 7, 1788 (<cite>Parl. Hist.</cite>, vol. xxvii.).
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_379'>379</a>.</dt>
- <dd>John Hoppner (1758–1810), the portrait-painter.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>Charles Long (1761–1838), paymaster-general, created Baron Farnborough in 1826.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_380'>380</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>From slashing Bentley</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> Pope, <cite>Prologue to the
- Satires</cite>, l. 164.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_381'>381</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>It was Caviare to the multitude.</em>’ ‘’Twas caviare to the general.’
- <cite>Hamlet</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> Scene 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>Note. <cite>Hamlet</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> Scene 2.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_382'>382</a>.</dt>
- <dd><cite>An Essay on the Ignorance of the Learned.</cite> Republished in <cite>Table
- Talk</cite>, from <cite>The Scots Magazine</cite> (New Series), iii. 55.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_384'>384</a>.</dt>
- <dd><cite>Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine.</cite> Founded by William Blackwood (1776–1834) in
- 1817.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>You have tried it twice since.</em> That is, in his reviews of <cite>Characters of
- Shakespear’s Plays</cite> (January 1818, vol. xviii. p. 458) and of <cite>Lectures on the
- English Poets</cite> (July 1818, vol. xix. p. 424).
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_385'>385</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Be noticed in the Edinburgh Review.</em> By Jeffrey, July 1817 (vol. xxviii. p. 472).
- ‘<em>Dedicate its sweet leaves.</em>’
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Ere he can spread his sweet leaves to the air,</div>
- <div class='line'>Or dedicate his beauty to the sun.’</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in26'><cite>Romeo and Juliet</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> Scene 1.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_386'>386</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>This is what is looked for</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Twelfth Night</cite>, Act
- <span class='fss'>III.</span> Scene 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>They keep you as an ape</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Hamlet</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>IV.</span> Scene 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>You ‘have the office,’</em> <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i>
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in16'>‘——You, mistress,</div>
- <div class='line'>That have the office opposite to Saint Peter,</div>
- <div class='line'>And keep the gate of hell!’</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in28'><cite>Othello</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> Scene 2.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_459'>459</span></div>
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_386'>386</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>You ‘keep a corner,’</em> <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i>
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>‘Or keep it as a cistern for foul toads</div>
- <div class='line'>To knot and gender in.’</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in28'><cite>Othello</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> Scene 2.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Lay the flattering unction.</em>’
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Lay not that flattering unction to your soul.’</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in20'><cite>Hamlet</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> Scene 4.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_387'>387</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>The authority of Mr. Burke.</em> Burke refers to Henry VIII. as ‘one of the most
- decided tyrants in the rolls of history,’ and speaks of ‘his iniquitous proceedings’
- ‘when he resolved to rob the abbies.’ <cite>Reflections on the Revolution in
- France</cite> (<cite>Select Works</cite>, ed. Payne, ii. 136–137). See also a passage in
- <cite>A Letter to a Noble Lord</cite> (<cite>Works</cite>, Bohn, <span
- class='fss'>V.</span> 131 <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">et seq.</span></i>).
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>With Mr. Coleridge in his late Lectures.</em> Hazlitt probably refers to <cite>The
- Statesman’s Manual</cite> (1816). See <cite>Political Essays</cite>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Truth to be a liar.</em>’ <cite>Hamlet</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span>
- Scene 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Speak out, Grildrig.</em>’ See Swift’s <cite>Gulliver’s Travels</cite> (Voyage to
- Brobdingnag).
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_388'>388</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>The insolence of office</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Hamlet</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>III.</span> Scene 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Those ‘who crook,’</em> <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Hamlet</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>III.</span> Scene 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Spa-fields.</em> Where the famous meeting of reformers had recently (December 2,
- 1816) been held.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>A seditious Sunday paper.</em> <cite>The Examiner</cite> was published on Sunday.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Mr. Coleridge’s ‘Conciones ad Populum.’</em> Two anti-Pittite addresses published in
- 1795.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_389'>389</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>The pride, pomp</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Othello</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>III.</span> Scene 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>One murder makes a villain</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> From Bishop Porteus’s prize poem
- <cite>Death</cite> (1759).
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_390'>390</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>The still sad music of humanity.</em> Wordsworth’s <cite>Lines composed a few miles
- above Tintern Abbey</cite>.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_391'>391</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>You have forgotten Mr. Burke</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> See <cite>Letters on a Regicide
- Peace</cite> (<cite>Select Works</cite>, ed. Payne, iii. p. 50).
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Go to</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i>
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Go to, Sir; you weigh equally; a feather will turn the scale.’</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in24'><cite>Measure for Measure</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> Scene 2.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘The weight of a hair will turn the scales between their avoirdupois.’</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in37'><cite>2 Henry IV.</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> Scene 4.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Cinque-spotted</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Cymbeline</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>II.</span> Scene 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>Note. ‘<em>Carnage is the daughter of humanity.</em>’ See note to p. 214 and <cite>Notes
- and Queries</cite>, 9th series, ii. 309, 398; iii. 37.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_392'>392</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Red-lattice phrases.</em> Alehouse language. See <cite>Merry Wives of Windsor</cite>,
- Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> Scene 2.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_393'>393</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Such ‘welcome and unwelcome things.’</em> <cite>Macbeth</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>IV.</span> Scene 3.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>The objection to ‘Romeo and Juliet.’</em> See <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">ante</span></i>, p. 249. Hazlitt
- refers to the criticism of <cite>Paradise Lost</cite> in his Lecture on Shakspeare and
- Milton (<cite>Lectures on the English Poets</cite>).
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>Note. Quoted from a review by Jeffrey in <cite>The Edinburgh Review</cite>, August 1817
- (vol. xxviii. at p. 473).
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_394'>394</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>One of the most perfect</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> Quoted from Gifford’s review of
- <cite>Characters of Shakespear’s Plays</cite> (vol. xviii. p. 458).
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Ends of verse</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i>
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Chear’d up himself with ends of verse,</div>
- <div class='line'>And sayings of philosophers.’</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in22'><em>Hudibras</em>, Part <span class='fss'>I.</span> Canto iii.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_460'>460</span></div>
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_394'>394</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>The geometricians and chemists of France.</em> Burke’s <cite>A Letter to a Noble
- Lord</cite> (<cite>Works</cite>, Bohn, <span class='fss'>V.</span> 142).
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Present to your mind’s eye.</em>’ <cite>Hamlet</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>I.</span> Scene 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Holds his crown</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> Burke’s <cite>Reflections on the Revolution
- in France</cite> (<cite>Select Works</cite>, ed. Payne, ii. 17).
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_395'>395</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>The ingenious parallel</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> See <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">ante</span></i>, p. 171.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>The article in the last Review.</em> <cite>Quarterly Review</cite>, July 1818 (vol.
- xix, p. 424).
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_398'>398</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>We must speak by the card</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Hamlet</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>V.</span> Scene 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>A knavish speech</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Hamlet</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>IV.</span> Scene 2.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Shakespear says</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Othello</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>III.</span> Scene 3.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_400'>400</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>The authority of Mr. Burke.</em> Hazlitt quotes inaccurately a passage in Burke’s
- essay ‘On the Sublime and Beautiful,’ <cite>Works</cite> (Bohn), i. 81.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Emelie that fayrer</em>, <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Canterbury Tales</cite> (The
- Knightes Tale, 1035–8).
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_401'>401</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>The only mistake.</em> The reference is probably to a passage in the first edition,
- where Hazlitt says, ‘Prior’s serious poetry, as his <cite>Alma</cite>, is as heavy, as
- his familiar style was light and agreeable.’ Gifford quotes this passage and adds:
- ‘Unluckily for our critic, Prior’s <cite>Alma</cite> is in his lightest and most familiar
- style, and is the most highly finished specimen of that species of versification which
- our language possesses.’ In the second edition Hazlitt substituted <cite>Solomon</cite>
- for <cite>Alma</cite>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Mr. Coleridge.</em> See <cite>Biographia Literaria</cite>, Chap, iii., note at the
- end. Coleridge had already in the first number of the Friend referred to this passage,
- which appeared in a footnote by the editor of <cite>The Beauties of the
- Anti-Jacobin</cite>, and not in <cite>The Anti-Jacobin</cite> itself. See
- <cite>Athenæum</cite>, May 31, 1900.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><em>Your predecessor.</em> Gifford was himself editor of the <cite>Anti-Jacobin, or
- Weekly Examiner</cite>, which appeared from November 20, 1797, to July 9, 1798.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_402'>402</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Dying, make a swan-like end.</em>’
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Then, if he lose, he makes a swan-like end,</div>
- <div class='line'>Fading in music.’</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in16'><cite>Merchant of Venice</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>III.</span> Scene 2.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Being so majestical</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> <cite>Hamlet</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>I.</span> Scene 1.
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>Love is not love</em>,’ <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">etc.</span></i> Shakespeare, <em>Sonnet</em> <span
- class='fss'>CXVI.</span>
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_403'>403</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>A writer of third-rate books.</em>’ ‘He is a mere quack, Mr. Editor, and a mere
- bookmaker; one of the sort that lounge in third-rate book shops, and write third-rate
- books.’ From a letter in <cite>Blackwood’s Magazine</cite>, August 1818 (vol. iii. p.
- 550).
- </dd>
- <dt>&nbsp;</dt>
- <dd><cite>An Essay on the Principles of Human Action.</cite> Published in 1805.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_408'>408</a>.</dt>
- <dd><em>Mirabaud.</em> D’Holbach’s <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Système de la Nature</span></cite> is wrongly
- attributed to Jean Baptiste de Mirabaud (1675–1760), the translator of Tasso.
- </dd>
- <dt><a href='#Page_409'>409</a>.</dt>
- <dd>‘<em>On this bank and shoal of time.</em>’ <cite>Macbeth</cite>, Act <span
- class='fss'>I.</span> Scene 7.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f1'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r1'>1</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><span class='pageno' id='Page_xxvi'>xxvi</span>Hazlitt has glanced at him in his notes on dissenters and dissent in the <cite>Political
-Essays</cite>, and has given a further taste of him in that very notable and gracious
-piece, ‘My First Acquaintance with Poets.’</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f2'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r2'>2</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>In 1805 he produced his essay on the Principles of Human Action. Being no
-metaphysician, I have never read this work; but Mr. Leslie Stephen, who is a
-very competent person in these matters, I am told, assures me (<em>D. N. B.</em>) that it
-is ‘scrupulously dry,’ though ‘showing great acuteness.’ This, I take leave to say—this
-is Hazlitt all over. None has written of the workaday elements in life and
-time with a rarer taste, a finer relish, a stronger confidence in himself and them.
-Yet, in dealing with absolutes in life and time, he is ‘scrupulously dry.’ This, I
-take it, is to be a man of letters.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f3'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r3'>3</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Or rather bedgown: unction-soiled and laudanum-stained.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f4'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r4'>4</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>John Hazlitt had been a pupil of Reynolds, and his miniatures were welcome
-at the Academy.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f5'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r5'>5</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Dans l’art il faut donner sa peau.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f6'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r6'>6</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>He had a painter in him, whether imperfectly developed or not; for he
-would condescend upon none but Guido, Raphael, Titian.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f7'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r7'>7</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>One was a likeness of his father, of which he has written in eloquent and
-engaging terms; another, a <em>Wordsworth</em>, which he destroyed; a third, the picture
-of Elia, ‘as a Venetian senator,’ now in the National Portrait Gallery; yet
-another, the presentment of an Old Woman, which is likened to a Rembrandt.
-Having seen none of these things, all I can say about them is that Hazlitt seems
-to have been passionately interested in colour; that he loved a picture because it
-was a piece of painting; and, if he knew not always bad (or rather third and
-fourth rate) work when he saw it, was as contemptuous of it, when he realised
-its status, as Fuseli himself.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f8'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r8'>8</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>There is an immense, even an insuperable difference between the two sorts of
-sensualists. To take an immediate instance: Lamb loved Hogarth, and found
-emotions in him, because he (Hogarth) was a novelist in paint; while Titian’s
-<cite>Bacchus and Ariadne</cite> touched his sense of letters, and, as Mr. Ainger has
-noted, suggested to him so much literature, or, at all events, so many literary
-possibilities, that Titian could not but be an arch-painter. Hazlitt felt his
-painter first, and thought not of the man-of-letters in his painter till his interest in
-his painter’s painting was—I won’t say extinguished but—allayed.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f9'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r9'>9</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>‘The point in debate,’ he says, ‘the worth or the bad quality of the painting
-... I am as well able to decide upon as any who ever brandished a pallette.’ I
-doubt not that he spoke the truth; yet the residuum of his criticisms of pictures,
-their after-taste, is mostly literary. And, as he was finally a man of letters, what
-else could one expect?</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f10'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r10'>10</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Leigh Hunt said that he was the best art critic that ever lived: that to read
-him was like seeing a picture through stained glass, and so forth. But Leigh Hunt
-knew not much more about pictures than Coleridge knew about the books he talked
-of, but had not read.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f11'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r11'>11</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The house had been the abode of Milton; for certain months it had harboured
-the eminent James Mill; it belonged to the celebrated Jeremy Bentham: so that
-in the matter of associations Hazlitt, a thorough-paced dissenter, was as well off
-as he could hope to be.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f12'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r12'>12</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Ten in number: on ‘The Rise and Progress of Modern Philosophy,’ as
-illustrated in the works of Hobbes, Locke and his followers, Hartley, Helvétius,
-and others. The lectures, Mr. Stephen says, were in part a reproduction of the
-<cite>Principles of Human Action</cite>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f13'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r13'>13</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Haydon says that Waterloo made him drunk for weeks. Then he pulled
-himself together, and for the rest of his life drank nothing but strong tea. He
-had, however, no sort of sympathy with those who held the ‘social glass’ to be
-Man’s safest introduction to the Pit. He only said that liquor did not agree with
-him, and looked on cheerfully while his friends—Lamb was as close as any—drank
-as they pleased.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f14'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r14'>14</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Both the <cite>Characters</cite> and the <cite>English Poets</cite> were reviewed by Gifford in the
-<cite>Quarterly</cite>. The style of these ‘reviews’ is abject; the inspiration venal; the
-matter the very dirt of the mind. Gifford hated Hazlitt for his politics, and set out
-to wither Hazlitt’s repute as a man of letters. For the tremendous reprisal with
-which he was visited, the reader is referred to the <em>Letter to William Gifford, Esq.</em>,
-in the first volume of the present Edition. If he find it over-savage: probably,
-being of to-day, he will: let him turn to his <cite>Quarterly</cite>, and consider, if he have
-the stomach, Gifford and the matter of offence.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f15'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r15'>15</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>He lived to rejoice in the Revolution of July; but of the great movement in
-the arts—of <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Henri Trois et sa Cour</span></i> and <em>Hernani</em>, of Delacroix and Barye, of
-Géricault and Bonington and de Vigny, and the rest of its heroes—he seems to
-have known nothing. That was his way. The new did not exist for him. A
-dissenter by birth and conviction, he yet cared only for the past, and the elder
-‘glories of our blood and state’ were to him, not shadows but, the sole substantial
-things he could keep room for in the kingdom of his mind.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f16'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r16'>16</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>’Tis a pleasure to remember that Lamb was with him to the end—was in his
-death-chamber in the very article of mortality. We have all read Carlyle on
-Lamb. The everlasting pity is that we shall never read Hazlitt on Carlyle.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f17'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r17'>17</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Him Shelley calls ‘a solemn and unsexual man.’</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f18'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r18'>18</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Much as years afterwards, according to a certain Nicolardot, the expertest of
-their kind were ‘on the list’ of old Ste.-Beuve.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f19'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r19'>19</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>His grandson describes him as ‘physically incapable’ of any but a transient
-fidelity to anybody.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f20'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r20'>20</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>He confessed that one day he told it half a dozen times or so to persons he
-had never seen before: once, twice over to the same listener.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f21'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r21'>21</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>It cost Hazlitt a crown, perhaps less; and he arranged—apparently with
-Mrs. Hazlitt—to be taken in the act! After this the knowledge that Mr. and
-Mrs. Hazlitt took tea together, <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">pendente lite</span></i>, and that then and after his second
-espousals Hazlitt supplied this very reasonable woman with money, astonishes no
-more, but comes as a kind of anticlimax.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f22'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r22'>22</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>That damsel presently married in her station. She seems to have been a
-decent woman according to her lights, and to have lived up honestly to her ideals,
-such as they were.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f23'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r23'>23</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span></p>
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>There was a laughing devil in his sneer</div>
- <div class='line'>That raised emotions both of rage and fear;</div>
- <div class='line'>And where his frown of hatred darkly fell,</div>
- <div class='line'>Hope, withering, fled—and Mercy sighed farewell.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f24'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r24'>24</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>These details are Patmore’s, and, even if they be true, are not the whole
-truth. Hazlitt loved solitude and the country, had to write for a living, wrote
-with difficulty, and left no inconsiderable body of work.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f25'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r25'>25</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>What I mean is, that I have heard the best, as I believe, the last of the old
-century and the first of the new have shown.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f26'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r26'>26</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>‘He always made the best pun and the best remark in the course of the
-evening. His serious conversation, like his serious writing, is his best. No
-one ever stammered out such fine, piquant, deep, eloquent things in half a dozen
-half-sentences as he does. His jests scald like tears: and he probes a question
-with a play upon words. What a keen, laughing, hare-brained vein of home-felt
-truth! What choice venom!’</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f27'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r27'>27</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span></p>
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>It filled the valley like a mist,</div>
- <div class='line'>And still poured out its endless chant,</div>
- <div class='line'>And still it swells upon the ear,</div>
- <div class='line'>And wraps me in a golden trance,</div>
- <div class='line'>Drowning the noisy tumult of the world.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; &#8196;.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Like sweetest warblings from a sacred grove ...</div>
- <div class='line'>Contending with the wild winds as they roar ...</div>
- <div class='line'>And the proud places of the insolent</div>
- <div class='line'>And the oppressor fell ...</div>
- <div class='line'>Such and so little is the mind of Man!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f28'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r28'>28</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>His summary of the fight between Hickman and Bill Neate is alone in
-literature, as also in the annals of the Ring. Jon Bee was an intelligent creature
-of his kind, and knew a very great deal more about pugilism than Hazlitt knew;
-but to contrast the two is to learn much. Badcock (which is Jon Bee) had seen
-(and worshipped) Jem Belcher, and had reported fights with an extreme contempt
-for Pierce Egan, the illiterate ass who gave us <em>Boxiana</em>. Hazlitt, however, looked
-on at the proceedings of Neate and the Gaslight Man exactly as he had looked on
-at divers creations of Edmund Kean. He saw the essentials in both expressions of
-human activity, and his treatment of both is fundamentally the same. In both he
-ignores the trivial: here the acting (in its lowest sense), there the hits that did not
-count. And thus, as he gives you only the vital touches, you know how and why
-Neate beat Hickman, and can tell the exact moment at which Hickman began to be
-a beaten man. ’Tis the same with his panegyric on Cavanagh, the fives-player. For
-a blend of gusto with understanding I know but one thing to equal with this: the
-note on Dr. Grace, which appeared in <cite>The National Observer</cite>; and the night that
-that was written, I sent the writer back to Hazlitt’s <cite>Cavanagh</cite>, and said to him
-——! On the whole the <cite>Dr. Grace</cite> is the better of the two. But it has scarce
-the incorruptible fatness of the <cite>Cavanagh</cite>. Gusto, though, is Hazlitt’s special
-attribute: he glories in what he likes, what he reads, what he feels, what he
-writes. He triumphed in his Kean, his Shakespeare, his Bill Neate, his Rousseau,
-his coffee-and-cream and <em>Love for Love</em> in the inn-parlour at Alton. He relished
-things; and expressed them with a relish. That is his ‘note.’ Some others have
-relished only the consummate expression of nothing.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f29'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r29'>29</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Listen, else, to Lamb himself: ‘Protesting against much that he has written,
-and some things which he chooses to do; judging him by his conversation which
-I enjoyed so long, and relished so deeply; or by his books, in those places where
-no clouding passion intervenes, I should belie my own conscience if I said less
-than that I think W. H. to be, in his natural and healthy state, one of the wisest
-and finest spirits breathing. So far from being ashamed of that intimacy which
-was betwixt us, it is my boast that I was able for so many years to have preserved
-it entire; and I think I shall go to my grave without finding or expecting to find
-such another companion.’ Thus does one Royalty celebrate the kingship and
-enrich the immortality of another.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f30'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r30'>30</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>It is Steele’s; and the whole paper (No. 95) is in his most delightful manner.
-The dream about the mistress, however, is given to Addison by the Editors, and
-the general style of that number is his; though, from the story being related
-personally of Bickerstaff, who is also represented as having been at that time in
-the army, we conclude it to have originally come from Steele, perhaps in the
-course of conversation. The particular incident is much more like a story of his
-than of Addison’s.—H. T.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f31'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r31'>31</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>We had in our hands the other day an original copy of the <cite>Tatler</cite>, and a list
-of the subscribers. It is curious to see some names there which we should hardly
-think of, (that of Sir Isaac Newton is among them), and also to observe the degree
-of interest excited by those of the different persons, which is not adjusted according
-to the rules of the Heralds’ College.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f32'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r32'>32</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Pope also declares that he had a particular regard for an old post which stood
-in the court-yard before the house where he was brought up.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f33'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r33'>33</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>See also the passage in his prose works relating to the first design of <cite>Paradise
-Lost</cite>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f34'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r34'>34</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span></p>
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘Oh! for my sake do you with fortune chide,</div>
- <div class='line'>The guilty goddess of my harmless deeds,</div>
- <div class='line'>That did not better for my life provide,</div>
- <div class='line'>Than public means which public manners breeds.</div>
- <div class='line'>Thence comes it that my name receives a brand,</div>
- <div class='line'>And almost thence my nature is subdued</div>
- <div class='line'>To what it works in, like the dyer’s hand.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>At another time, we find him ‘desiring this man’s art, and that man’s scope’: so
-little was Shakspeare, as far as we can learn, enamoured of himself!</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f35'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r35'>35</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>See an Essay on the genius of Hogarth, by C. Lamb, published in a periodical
-work, called the <em>Reflector</em>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f36'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r36'>36</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>‘A good sherris-sack hath a twofold operation in it; it ascends me into the
-brain, dries me there all the foolish, dull, and crudy vapours which environ it; and
-makes it apprehensive, quick, forgetive, full of nimble, fiery, and delectable shapes,
-which, delivered over to the tongue, becomes excellent wit,’ etc.—<cite>Second Part of
-Henry IV.</cite></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f37'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r37'>37</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>We have an instance in our own times of a man, equally devoid of understanding
-and principle, but who manages the House of Commons by his <em>manner</em>
-alone.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f38'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r38'>38</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Mr. Wordsworth, who has written a sonnet to the King on the good that he
-has done in the last fifty years, has made an attack on a set of gipsies for having
-done nothing in four and twenty hours. ‘The stars had gone their rounds, but
-they had not stirred from their place.’ And why should they, if they were comfortable
-where they were? We did not expect this turn from Mr. Wordsworth,
-whom we had considered as the prince of poetical idlers, and patron of the philosophy
-of indolence, who formerly insisted on our spending our time ‘in a wise
-passiveness.’ Mr. W. will excuse us if we are not converts to his recantation of
-his original doctrine; for he who changes his opinion loses his authority. We
-did not look for this Sunday-school philosophy from him. What had he himself
-been doing in these four and twenty hours? Had he been admiring a flower, or
-writing a sonnet? We hate the doctrine of utility, even in a philosopher, and
-much more in a poet: for the only real utility is that which leads to enjoyment,
-and the end is, in all cases, better than the means. A friend of ours from the
-North of England proposed to make Stonehenge of some use, by building houses
-with it. Mr. W.’s quarrel with the gipsies is an improvement on this extravagance,
-for the gipsies are the only living monuments of the first ages of society.
-They are an everlasting source of thought and reflection on the advantages and
-disadvantages of the progress of civilisation: they are a better answer to the cotton
-manufactories than Mr. W. has given in the <cite>Excursion</cite>. ‘They are a grotesque
-ornament to the civil order.’ We should be sorry to part with Mr. Wordsworth’s
-poetry, because it amuses and interests us: we should be still sorrier to part with
-the tents of our old friends, the Bohemian philosophers, because they amuse and
-interest us more. If any one goes a journey, the principal event in it is his meeting
-with a party of gipsies. The pleasantest trait in the character of Sir Roger de
-Coverley, is his interview with the gipsy fortune-teller. This is enough.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f39'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r39'>39</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The Dissenters in this country (if we except the founders of sects, who fall
-under a class by themselves) have produced only two remarkable men, Priestley
-and Jonathan Edwards. The work of the latter on the Will is written with as much
-power of logic, and more in the true spirit of philosophy, than any other metaphysical
-work in the language. His object throughout is not to perplex the
-question, but to satisfy his own mind and the reader’s. In general, the principle
-of dissent arises more from want of sympathy and imagination, than from strength
-of reason. The spirit of contradiction is not the spirit of philosophy.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f40'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r40'>40</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The modern Quakers come as near the mark in these cases as they can.
-They do not go to plays, but they are great attenders of spouting-clubs and lectures.
-They do not frequent concerts, but run after pictures. We do not know exactly
-how they stand with respect to the circulating libraries. A Quaker poet would be
-a literary phenomenon.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f41'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r41'>41</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>We have made the above observations, not as theological partisans, but as
-natural historians. We shall some time or other give the reverse of the picture;
-for there are vices inherent in establishments and their thorough-paced adherents,
-which well deserve to be distinctly pointed out.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f42'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r42'>42</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Is all this a rhodomontade, or literal matter of fact, not credible in these
-degenerate days?</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f43'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r43'>43</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>One of the most interesting traits of the amiable simplicity of Walton, is the
-circumstance of his friendship for Cotton, one of the ‘swash-bucklers’ of the age.
-Dr. Johnson said there were only three works which the reader was sorry to come
-to the end of, <cite>Don Quixote</cite>, <cite>Robinson Crusoe</cite>, and the <cite>Pilgrim’s Progress</cite>. Perhaps
-Walton’s <cite>Angler</cite> might be added to the number.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f44'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r44'>44</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Oxberry’s manner of acting this character is a very edifying comment on the
-text: he flings his arms about, like those of a figure pulled by strings, and seems
-actuated by a pure spirit of infatuation, as if one blast of folly had taken possession
-of his whole frame,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘And filled up all the mighty void of sense.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f45'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r45'>45</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The following lines are remarkable for a certain cloying sweetness in the
-repetition of the rhymes:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Titania.</em> Be kind and courteous to this gentleman;</div>
- <div class='line'>Hop in his walks, and gambol in his eyes;</div>
- <div class='line'>Feed him with apricocks and dewberries,</div>
- <div class='line'>With purple grapes, green figs, and mulberries;</div>
- <div class='line'>The honey-bags steal from the humble bees,</div>
- <div class='line'>And for night tapers crop their waxen thighs,</div>
- <div class='line'>And light them at the fiery glow-worm’s eyes,</div>
- <div class='line'>To have my love to bed, and to arise:</div>
- <div class='line'>And pluck the wings from painted butterflies,</div>
- <div class='line'>To fan the moon beams from his sleeping eyes;’</div>
- <div class='line'>Nod to him, elves, and do him courtesies.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f46'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r46'>46</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The late ingenious Baron Grimm, of acute critical memory, was up to the
-merit of the <cite>Beggar’s Opera</cite>. In his Correspondence, he says, ‘If it be true that
-the nearer a writer is to Nature, the more certain he is of pleasing, it must be
-allowed that the English, in their dramatic pieces, have greatly the advantage over
-us. There reigns in them an inestimable tone of nature, which the timidity of
-our taste has banished from French pieces. M. Patu has just published, in two
-volumes, <em>A selection of smaller dramatic pieces, translated from the English</em>, which will
-eminently support what I have advanced. The principal one among this selection
-is the celebrated <cite>Beggar’s Opera</cite> of Gay, which has had such an amazing run in
-England. We are here in the very worst company imaginable; the <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Dramatis Personæ</span></i>
-are robbers, pickpockets, gaolers, prostitutes, and the like; yet we are highly
-amused, and in no haste to quit them; and why? Because there is nothing in
-the world more original or more natural. There is no occasion to compare our
-most celebrated comic operas with this, to see how far we are removed from truth
-and nature, and this is the reason that, notwithstanding our wit, we are almost
-always flat and insipid. Two faults are generally committed by our writers, which
-they seem incapable of avoiding. They think they have done wonders if they have
-only faithfully copied the dictionaries of the personages they bring upon the stage,
-forgetting that the great art is to chuse the moments of character and passion in
-those who are to speak, since it is those moments alone that render them interesting.
-For want of this discrimination, the piece necessarily sinks into insipidity
-and monotony. Why do almost all M. Vade’s pieces fatigue the audience to
-death? Because all his characters speak the same language; because each is a
-perfect resemblance of the other. Instead of this, in the <cite>Beggar’s Opera</cite>, among
-eight or ten girls of the town, each has her separate character, her peculiar traits,
-her peculiar modes of expression, which give her a marked distinction from her
-companions.’—Vol. i. p. 185.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f47'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r47'>47</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>He who speaks two languages has no country. The French, when they made
-their language the common language of the Courts of Europe, gained more than by
-all their subsequent conquests.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f48'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r48'>48</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>There is, however, in the African physiognomy a grandeur and a force, arising
-from this uniform character of violence and abruptness. It is consistent with
-itself throughout. Entire deformity can only be found where the features have
-not only no symmetry or softness in themselves, but have no connection with one
-another, presenting every variety of wretchedness, and a jumble of all sorts of
-defects, such as we see in Hogarth or in the streets of London; for instance, a
-large bottle-nose, with a small mouth twisted awry.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f49'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r49'>49</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The following version, communicated by a classical friend, is exact and
-elegant:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘He said; and strait the herald Argicide</div>
- <div class='line'>Beneath his feet his winged sandals tied,</div>
- <div class='line'>Immortal, golden, that his flight could bear</div>
- <div class='line'>O’er seas and lands, like waftage of the air.</div>
- <div class='line'>His rod too, that can close the eyes of men</div>
- <div class='line'>In balmy sleep, and open them again,</div>
- <div class='line'>He took, and holding it in hand, went flying:</div>
- <div class='line'>Till, from Pieria’s top the sea descrying,</div>
- <div class='line'>Down to it sheer he dropp’d; and scour’d away</div>
- <div class='line'>Like the wild gull, that, fishing o’er the bay,</div>
- <div class='line'>Flaps on, with pinions dipping in the brine;—</div>
- <div class='line'>So went on the far sea the shape divine.’</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in34'><cite>Odyssey</cite>, book v.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in6'>——‘That was Arion crown’d:—</div>
- <div class='line'>So went he playing on the wat’ry plain.’</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in34'><cite>Faerie Queen.</cite></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>There is a striking description in Mr. Burke’s Reflections of the late Queen of
-France, whose charms had left their poison in the heart of this Irish orator and
-patriot, and set the world in a ferment sixteen years afterwards. ‘And surely
-never lighted on this orb, which she hardly seemed to touch, a more delightful
-vision.’ The idea is in Don Quixote, where the Duenna speaks of the air with
-which the Duchess ‘treads, or rather seems to disdain the ground she walks on.’
-We have heard the same account of the gracefulness of Marie Antoinette from an
-artist, who saw her at Versailles much about the same time that Mr. Burke did.
-He stood in one corner of a little antechamber, and as the doors were narrow, she
-was obliged to pass sideways with her hoop. She glided by him in an instant, as if
-borne on a cloud.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f50'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r50'>50</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>In a fruit or flower-piece by Vanhuysum, the minutest details acquire a certain
-grace and beauty from the delicacy with which they are finished. The eye dwells
-with a giddy delight on the liquid drops of dew, on the gauze wings of an insect,
-on the hair and feathers of a bird’s nest, the streaked and speckled egg-shells, the
-fine legs of the little travelling caterpillar. Who will suppose that the painter had
-not the same pleasure in detecting these nice distinctions in nature, that the critic
-has in tracing them in the picture?</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f51'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r51'>51</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>We here allude particularly to Turner, the ablest landscape painter now
-living, whose pictures are, however, too much abstractions of aerial perspective,
-and representations not so properly of the objects of nature as of the medium
-through which they are seen. They are the triumph of the knowledge of the
-artist, and of the power of the pencil over the barrenness of the subject. They
-are pictures of the elements of air, earth, and water. The artist delights to go
-back to the first chaos of the world, or to that state of things when the waters
-were separated from the dry land, and light from darkness, but as yet no living
-thing nor tree bearing fruit was seen upon the face of the earth. All is ‘without
-form and void.’ Some one said of his landscapes that they were <em>pictures of nothing,
-and very like</em>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f52'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r52'>52</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Raphael not only could not paint a landscape; he could not paint people in a
-landscape. He could not have painted the heads or the figures, or even the dresses,
-of the St. Peter Martyr. His figures have always an <em>in-door</em> look, that is, a set,
-determined, voluntary, dramatic character, arising from their own passions, or a
-watchfulness of those of others, and want that wild uncertainty of expression, which
-is connected with the accidents of nature and the changes of the elements. He has
-nothing <em>romantic</em> about him.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f53'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r53'>53</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>A good-natured man will always have a smack of pedantry about him. A
-lawyer, who talks about law, <em>certioraris</em>, <em>noli prosequis</em>, and silk gowns, though he
-may be a blockhead, is by no means dangerous. It is a very bad sign (unless
-where it arises from singular modesty) when you cannot tell a man’s profession
-from his conversation. Such persons either feel no interest in what concerns
-them most, or do not express what they feel. ‘Not to admire any thing’ is a very
-unsafe rule. A London apprentice, who did not admire the Lord Mayor’s coach,
-would stand a good chance of being hanged. We know but one person absurd
-enough to have formed his whole character on the above maxim of Horace, and
-who affects a superiority over others from an uncommon degree of natural and
-artificial stupidity.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f54'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r54'>54</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>‘<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Je crois que l’imagination étoit la première de ses facultés, et qu’elle absorboit
-même toutes les autres.</span>’—P. 80.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f55'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r55'>55</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>‘<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Il avoit une grande puissance de raison sur les matieres abstraites, sur les
-objets qui n’ont de réalité que dans la pensée</span>,’ etc.—P. 81.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f56'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r56'>56</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>He did more towards the French Revolution than any other man. Voltaire,
-by his wit and penetration, had rendered superstition contemptible, and tyranny
-odious: but it was Rousseau who brought the feeling of irreconcilable enmity to
-rank and privileges, <em>above humanity</em>, home to the bosom of every man,—identified it
-with all the pride of intellect, and with the deepest yearnings of the human heart.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f57'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r57'>57</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>We shall here give one passage as an example, which has always appeared to
-us the very perfection of this kind of personal and local description. It is that
-where he gives an account of his being one of the choristers at the Cathedral at
-Chambery: ‘<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">On jugera bien que la vie de la maîtrise toujours chantante et gaie,
-avec les Musiciens et les Enfans de chœur, me plaisoit plus que celle du Séminaire
-avec les Peres de S. Lazare. Cependant, cette vie, pour être plus libre, n’en étoit
-pas moins égale et réglée. J’étois fait pour aimer l’indépendance et pour n’en
-abuser jamais. Durant six mois entiers, je ne sortis pas une seule fois, que pour
-aller chez Maman ou à l’Église, et je n’en fus pas même tenté. Cette intervalle est
-un de ceux où j’ai vécu dans le plus grand calme, et que je me suis rappelé avec le
-plus de plaisir. Dans les situations diverses où je me suis trouvé, quelques uns out
-été marqués par un tel sentiment de bien-être, qu’en les remémorant j’en suis affecté
-comme si j’y étois encore. Non seulement je me rappelle les tems, les lieux, les
-personnes, mais tous les objets environnans, la température de l’air, son odeur, sa
-couleur, une certaine impression locale qui ne s’est fait sentir que là, et dont le
-souvenir vif m’y transporte de nouveau. Par exemple, tout ce qu’on répétait a la
-maîtrise, tout ce qu’on chantoit au chœur, tout ce qu’on y faisoit, le bel et noble
-habit des Chanoines, les hasubles des Prêtres, les mitres des Chantres, la figure des
-Musiciens, un vieux Charpentier boiteux qui jouoit de la contrebasse, un petit Abbé
-biondin qui jouoit du violon, le lambeau de soutane qu’après avoir posé son épée,
-M. le Maître endossoit par-dessus son habit laïque, et le beau surplis fin dont il en
-couvrait les loques pour aller au chœur; l’orgueil avec lequel j’allois, tenant ma
-petite flûte à bec, m’établir dans l’orchestre, à la tribune, pour un petit bout de récit
-que M. le Maître avoit fait exprès pour moi: le bon diner qui nous attendoit
-ensuite, le bon appétit qu’on y portoit:—ce concours d’objets vivement retracé m’a
-cent fois charmé dans ma mémoire, autant et plus que dans la realité. J’ai gardé
-toujours une affection tendre pour un certain air du</span> <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Conditor alme syderum</span></i> <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">qui
-marche par iambes; parce qu’un Dimanche de l’Avent j’entendis de mon lit chanter
-cette hymne, avant le jour, sur le perron de la Cathédrale, selon un rite de cette
-eglise là. Mlle. <em>Merceret</em>, femme de chambre de Maman, savoit un peu de
-musique; je n’oublierai jamais un petit motet <em>afferte</em>, que M. le Maître me fit
-chanter avec elle, et que sa maîtresse écoutait avec tant de plaisir. Enfin tout,
-jusqu’à la bonne servante <em>Perrine</em>, qui étoit si bonne fille, et que les enfans de chœur
-faisoient tant endêver—tout dans les souvenirs de ces tems de bonheur et d’innocence
-revient souvent me ravir et m’attrister.</span>’—<cite>Confessions</cite>, <span class='fss'>LIV.</span> iii. p. 283.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f58'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r58'>58</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Burns, when about to sail for America after the first publication of his poems,
-consoled himself with ‘the delicious thought of being regarded as a clever fellow,
-though on the other side of the Atlantic.’</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f59'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r59'>59</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>This man (Burke) who was a half poet and a half philosopher, has done more
-mischief than perhaps any other person in the world. His understanding was not
-competent to the discovery of any truth, but it was sufficient to palliate a falsehood;
-his reasons, of little weight in themselves, thrown into the scale of power,
-were dreadful. Without genius to adorn the beautiful, he had the art to throw a
-dazzling veil over the deformed and disgusting; and to strew the flowers of
-imagination over the rotten carcass of corruption, not to prevent, but to communicate
-the infection. His jealousy of Rousseau was one chief cause of his opposition
-to the French Revolution. The writings of the one had changed the institutions
-of a kingdom; while the speeches of the other, with the intrigues of his whole
-party, had changed nothing but the <em>turnspit of the King’s kitchen</em>. He would have
-blotted out the broad pure light of Heaven, because it did not first shine in at the
-little Gothic windows of St. Stephen’s Chapel. The genius of Rousseau had
-levelled the towers of the Bastile with the dust; our zealous reformist, who would
-rather be doing mischief than nothing, tried, therefore, to patch them up again, by
-calling that loathsome dungeon the King’s castle, and by fulsome adulation of the
-virtues of a Court strumpet. This man,—but enough of him here.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f60'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r60'>60</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>This word is not English.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f61'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r61'>61</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Written in 1806.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f62'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r62'>62</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Plato’s cave, in which he supposes a man to be shut up all his life with his
-back to the light, and to see nothing of the figures of men, or other objects that
-pass by, but their shadows on the opposite wall of his cell, so that when he is let
-out and sees the real figures, he is only dazzled and confounded by them, seems an
-ingenious satire on the life of a book-worm.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f63'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r63'>63</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The following lively description of this actress is given by Cibber in his
-Apology:—</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>‘What found most employment for her whole various excellence at once, was
-the part of Melantha, in <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Marriage-à-la-mode</span>. Melantha is as finished an impertinent
-as ever fluttered in a drawing-room, and seems to contain the most
-complete system of female foppery that could possibly be crowded into the tortured
-form of a fine lady. Her language, dress, motion, manners, soul, and body, are
-in a continual hurry to be something more than is necessary or commendable.
-And though I doubt it will be a vain labour to offer you a just likeness of Mrs.
-Montfort’s action, yet the fantastic impression is still so strong in my memory,
-that I cannot help saying something, though fantastically, about it. The first
-ridiculous airs that break from her are upon a gallant never seen before, who
-delivers her a letter from her father, recommending him to her good graces as an
-honourable lover. Here now, one would think she might naturally shew a little
-of the sex’s decent reserve, though never so slightly covered! No, sir; not a tittle
-of it; modesty is the virtue of a poor-soul’d country gentlewoman: she is too
-much a court-lady, to be under so vulgar a confusion: she reads the letter, therefore,
-with a careless, dropping lip, and an erected brow, humming it hastily over,
-as if she were impatient to outgo her father’s commands, by making a complete
-conquest of him at once: and that the letter might not embarrass her attack,
-crack! she crumbles it at once into her palm, and pours upon him her whole
-artillery of airs, eyes, and motion; down goes her dainty, diving body to the
-ground, as if she were sinking under the conscious load of her own attractions;
-then launches into a flood of fine language and compliment, still playing her chest
-forward in fifty falls and risings, like a swan upon waving water; and, to complete
-her impertinence, she is so rapidly fond of her own wit, that she will not
-give her lover leave to praise it: Silent assenting bows, and vain endeavours to
-speak, are all the share of the conversation he is admitted to, which at last he is
-relieved from, by her engagement to half a score visits, which she <em>swims</em> from him
-to make, with a promise to return in a twinkling.’—<cite>The Life of Colley Cibber</cite>,
-p. 138.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f64'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r64'>64</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><span class='pageno' id='Page_362'>362</span>A few alterations and corrections have been inserted in the present edition.</p>
-
-<div class='c017'>[Note by W. H. to Second Edition.]</div>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f65'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r65'>65</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>See the passage, beginning—‘It is impossible you should see this, were they as
-prime as goats,’ etc.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f66'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r66'>66</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span></p>
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘<em>Iago.</em> Ay, too gentle.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Othello.</em> Nay, that’s certain.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f67'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r67'>67</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>In the account of her death, a friend has pointed out an instance of the poet’s
-exact observation of nature:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘There is a willow growing o’er a brook,</div>
- <div class='line'>That shews its hoary leaves i’ th’ glassy stream.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The inside of the leaves of the willow, next the water, is of a whitish colour, and
-the reflection would therefore be ‘hoary.’</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f68'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r68'>68</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>See an article, called <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Theatralia</span></i>, in the second volume of the <cite>Reflector</cite>, by
-Charles Lamb.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f69'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r69'>69</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>There is another instance of the same distinction in Hamlet and Ophelia.
-Hamlet’s pretended madness would make a very good real madness in any other
-author.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f70'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r70'>70</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The river wanders at its own sweet will.—<span class='sc'>Wordsworth.</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f71'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r71'>71</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The lady, we here see, gives up the argument, but keeps her mind.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f72'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r72'>72</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><span class='pageno' id='Page_412'>412</span>See the Examiner, Feb. 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f73'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r73'>73</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>‘I hated my profession’ (the business of a shoemaker, to which he was bound
-prentice) ‘with a perfect hatred.’ See <em>Mr. Gifford’s Life of Himself prefixed to his
-Juvenal</em>. He seems to have liked few things else better from that day to this.
-He tells us in the same work (though this is hardly what I should call being ‘a
-good hater’) that he did not much like his father, and was not sorry when he
-died. This candid and amiable personage always overflowed with ‘the milk of
-human kindness.’</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f74'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r74'>74</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>‘Undoubtedly the translator of Juvenal.’</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f75'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r75'>75</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>‘It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle, than for a rich man
-to enter the kingdom of heaven.’ Mr. Gifford here seems to exclude his band of
-gentlemen-pensioners, whom he pays on earth, from bursting with obscure worth
-into the realms of day. It is thus that Jacobin sentiments sprout from the
-commonest sympathy, and are even unavoidable in a government critic, when the
-common claims of humanity touch his pity or his self-love.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f76'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r76'>76</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>A quotation of Mr. Gifford’s from Shakespeare. Yet he reproaches me with
-quoting from Shakespeare.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f77'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r77'>77</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>To Apollo.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f78'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r78'>78</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Humanity stands as little in this author’s way as truth when his object is to
-please. It was in the same spirit of unmanly adulation that he struck at Mrs.
-Robinson’s lameness and ‘her crutches,’ with a hand, that ought to have been
-withered in the attempt by the lightning of public indignation and universal scorn.
-Mr. Sheridan once spoke of certain politicians in his day who ‘skulked behind the
-throne, and made use of the sceptre as a conductor to carry off the lightning of
-national indignation which threatened to consume them.’ There are certain small
-critics and poetasters who have always been trying to do the same thing.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f79'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r79'>79</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>This word is not very choice English: the character is not English.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f80'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r80'>80</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>See the Mæviad, l. 365, etc.:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘I too, whose voice no claims <em>but truth’s e’er mov’d</em>,</div>
- <div class='line'>Who long have seen thy merits, long have lov’d;</div>
- <div class='line'>Yet lov’d in silence, lest the rout should say,</div>
- <div class='line'>Too partial friendship tun’d the applausive lay;</div>
- <div class='line'>Now, now, that all conspire thy name to raise,</div>
- <div class='line'>May join the shout of unsuspected praise.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f81'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r81'>81</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>‘To be honest as this world goes, is to be one man picked out of ten
-thousand.’—<span class='sc'>Shakspeare.</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f82'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r82'>82</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>This character, (which has not been relished,) appeared originally in a small
-pamphlet in 1806, called Free Thoughts on Public Affairs, with a note acknowledging
-my obligations for the leading ideas to an article of Mr. Coleridge’s, in the
-Morning Post, Feb. 1800.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f83'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r83'>83</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>This extreme tenderness, it is to be observed, is felt by a person who in his
-Life of Ben Jonson, hopes that God will forgive Shakspeare for having written
-his plays!</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f84'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r84'>84</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>It was a phrase, (I have understood,) common in this gentleman’s mouth, that
-Robespierre, by destroying the lives of thousands, saved the lives of millions. Or,
-as Mr. Wordsworth has lately expressed the same thought with a different
-application, ‘Carnage is the daughter of humanity.’</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f85'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r85'>85</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>You have spelt it wrong (Marocchius), on purpose for what I know.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f86'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r86'>86</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Quoted from the <cite>Edinburgh Review</cite>, No. 56.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f87'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r87'>87</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><cite>Antony and Cleopatra</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> Scene 14.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f88'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r88'>88</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>For Tramezzani and William Augustus Conway (1789–1828), who were not favourites of
-Hazlitt, see <cite>A View of the English Stage</cite>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f89'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r89'>89</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><cite>Paradise Lost</cite>, <span class='fss'>IV.</span> 299.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f90'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r90'>90</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><cite>Don Quixote</cite>, Book <span class='fss'>III.</span> Chap. xxv.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f91'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r91'>91</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><cite>The Canterbury Tales.</cite> <cite>The Wife of Bath’s Prologue</cite>, ll. 593–599.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f92'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r92'>92</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><cite>Hamlet</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> Scene 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f93'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r93'>93</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Cobbett’s <cite>Weekly Political Register</cite> for November 18, 1815 (vol. xxix). Cobbett’s
-outburst against Milton and Shakespeare is headed ‘On the subject of potatoes.’</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f94'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r94'>94</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>See <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">ante</span></i>, p. 116.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f95'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r95'>95</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><em>Œuvres</em>, xxxv. p. 159.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f96'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r96'>96</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Probably the Letter from Paris, dated September 23, 1815, relating to the disposal of
-the works of art acquired by Napoleon.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f97'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r97'>97</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>See <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">ante</span></i>, pp. 140–151. The <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Catalogue</span></cite> appeared in <cite>The Morning Chronicle</cite> during the
-autumn of 1815 and the spring of 1816, beginning on September 22, 1815.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f98'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r98'>98</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>The reference seems to be to Samuel Parr (1747–1825) and Charles Burney (1757–1817).
-See Hazlitt’s essay ‘On the Ignorance of the Learned’ in <cite>Table Talk</cite>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f99'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r99'>99</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><cite>2 Henry IV.</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>II.</span> Scene 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f100'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r100'>100</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><cite>Midsummer Night’s Dream</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>I.</span> Scene 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f101'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r101'>101</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><cite>Political Register</cite>, July 30, 1802.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f102'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r102'>102</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>See <cite>The Faerie Queene</cite>, <span class='fss'>II.</span> xii. st. 86 and 87.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f103'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r103'>103</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>A variation, quoted from Burke (<cite>A Letter to a Noble Lord</cite>), of Shakespeare’s well-known
-lines in <cite>The Tempest</cite>, Act <span class='fss'>IV.</span> Scene 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f104'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r104'>104</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>For Burke on Rousseau see especially <cite>A Letter to a Member of the National Assembly</cite>
-(1791).</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f105'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r105'>105</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span></p>
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘I give you joy of the report,</div>
- <div class='line'>That he’s to have a place at court.’</div>
- <div class='line'>‘Yes, and a place he will grow rich in;</div>
- <div class='line'>A turnspit in the royal kitchen.’</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in10'>Swift, Miscell. Poems, <cite>Upon the Horrid Plot</cite>, etc.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>See Burke’s Speech (1780) on Economical Reform.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f106'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r106'>106</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><cite>Reflections on the Revolution in France</cite> (<cite>Select Works</cite>, ed. Payne, ii. 17).</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f107'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r107'>107</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>See Southey’s <cite>Carmen Triumphale</cite>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f108'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r108'>108</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>See the Notes to Southey’s <cite>Carmen Triumphale</cite>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f109'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r109'>109</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>See <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">ante</span></i>, note to p. 45.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f110'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r110'>110</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><cite>Tristram Shandy</cite>, <span class='fss'>IX.</span> 26.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f111'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r111'>111</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>In the <cite>Life of Napoleon</cite> Hazlitt refers to this saying, which he calls ‘quackery.’</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f112'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r112'>112</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>‘Nothing can be conceived more hard than the heart of a thorough-bred metaphysician.’
-<cite>A Letter to a Noble Lord</cite> (<cite>Works</cite>, Bohn, <span class='fss'>V.</span> 141).</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f113'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r113'>113</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>From the <cite>Essay on Poetry</cite> of John Sheffield, Duke of Buckingham.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div>Printed by T. and A. <span class='sc'>Constable</span>, (late) Printers to Her Majesty at the Edinburgh University Press</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='tnotes'>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c005'>TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES</h2>
-</div>
- <ol class='ol_1 c002'>
- <li>No attempt was made to standardize inconsistencies in spelling such as Shakespear,
- Shakespeare, and Shakspeare.
-
- </li>
- <li>Changed “dissoûte” to “dissoute” on p. <a href='#txxxi'>xxxi</a>.
-
- </li>
- <li>Changed “etoit” to “étoit” on p. <a href='#t90'>90</a>.
-
- </li>
- <li>Changed “bonhommie” to “bonhomme” on p. <a href='#t208'>208</a>.
-
- </li>
- <li>Silently corrected typographical errors.
-
- </li>
- <li>Retained anachronistic and non-standard spellings as printed.
- </li>
- </ol>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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